
	by Stan Stalnaker
	November 18, 2013
	
	from
	
	MoneyCNN Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
		
			| 
			Stan Stalnaker is Founding 
			Director of Hub Culture and the Ven, an asset-backed Internet 
			reserve currency that along with Bitcoin and Ripple, is leading the 
			digital asset market. | 
	
	
	 
	
	
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	China is quickly 
	moving to become 
	
	one of the leading players in 
	the Bitcoin market.
	
 
	
	
	NEW YORK 
	China is quietly positioning itself to 
	dominate the brave new world of Bitcoin.
	
	Until recently the digital crypto-currency was considered a joke by the 
	financial mainstream, but the view is starting to shift now that prices have 
	surged above their April peak and are now hovering around $600.
	
	
	Bitcoins are still being viewed cautiously 
	by lawmakers and regulators in the United States. In fact, there are two 
	Senate hearings this week about the risks Bitcoin poses. But that is 
	decidedly not the case in China. 
	
	 
	
	There has been a steady drumbeat of positive 
	news in the Chinese press this year, including a landmark report on CCTV, 
	China's national television network.
	
	China's fascination with the currency upstart resulted in an estimated 
	40,000 client downloads a day and a burgeoning acceptance rate from online 
	retailers down to physical traders standing in Tiananmen Square.
	
	The largest Bitcoin exchange in the world is located securely inside China, 
	and one of the world's largest Internet companies,
	
	Baidu, is integrating and using Bitcoin. It 
	seems highly unlikely that Baidu would be able to integrate Bitcoin payments 
	across its vast network of users without some sort of complicit nod from 
	higher authorities.
	
	Chinese interest could play a huge role in turning Bitcoin into the first 
	trillion dollar non-fiat currency.
	
	So why has China been so quick to embrace the virtual currency? It has been 
	down this road before. In 2009, the government moved to staunch the rapidly 
	rising phenomenon known as QQ, the virtual currency from social juggernaut
	
	Tencent.
	
	In just a couple of years, QQ had grown to such an extent that some 
	estimates put it at 13% of the Chinese cash economy. It was threatening to 
	supplant the yuan in a viral tsunami that showed no signs of abating. At its 
	height, people similarly gathered in public places to trade QQ, and 
	shopkeepers began accepting it for payment.
	
	Because Tencent controlled QQ through central online reserves, the Communist 
	Party's response was swift, hobbling QQ at its knees and bringing it well 
	back into line overnight. 
	
	 
	
	How did they do it? 
	
	 
	
	Since QQ was centrally managed, all the Chinese 
	government had to do was tell Tencent to limit QQ's use or face a total 
	shutdown of their business. So Tencent reeled it in.
	
	Such a move is not so easy with the decentralized cryptography of Bitcoin, 
	and Chinese officials know that.
	
	Within months of the chop on QQ, the Bitcoin algorithm was released 
	anonymously online. Bitcoin is difficult to trace. And as the open source 
	aspects of Bitcoin grew and strong demand began to push up prices, China 
	took notice, perhaps having been more aware than others of how quickly and 
	completely these things can take off.
	
	In terms of geopolitics, the implications of Chinese support for Bitcoin are 
	clear and complicated for the U.S. The more bitcoins a person or entity 
	control, the higher their influence in all things Bitcoin. While it is 
	unlikely anyone will ever control more than 51% of Bitcoin, such an event 
	could put the currency under control of that actor.
	
	In the meantime, Bitcoin presents a marvelous gift for China, a country 
	anxious to exert financial influence on a global scale, but nervous to 
	overtly undercut the U.S. dollar, which it holds in abundance.
	
	It could also help China exert more economic influence over commodity-rich 
	Africa. Digital currencies like Bitcoin are already set to take off there 
	and bring financial inclusion to 2.5 billion of the world's most 
	under-banked.
	
	As Bitcoin infrastructure matures, it has the potential to be used as a 
	currency in commodity markets and other areas of trade with lightning 
	quickness, from gold to wheat to cotton and, yes, oil.
	
	In Africa, this could mean the,
	
		
			- 
			
			destruction of weak country currencies 
- 
			
			large scale consumer adoption via mobile 
			payments 
- 
			
			a new era for Chinese financial 
			supremacy in Africa at large 
	
	For America, oil contracts from non-OPEC 
	countries denominated in Bitcoin would pose significant threats.
	
	That's why next year will be key for the future of Bitcoin.
	
	 
	
	Ironically, it is the United States, the "free 
	market" financial heavyweight in the world, that finds itself moving slowly 
	to figure out how to adopt Bitcoin. Meanwhile, China is proving to be a 
	leading player in this 21st century currency.
	
	If the U.S. winds up over-regulating Bitcoin, the existing power structure 
	in finance could be put at risk. The message to Congress is clear. Bitcoin 
	is here to stay and lawmakers would do well to make sure that the U.S. does 
	not get left behind in this brave, new digital currency world. 
	
	 
	
	The race is on, and Bitcoin doesn't care about 
	national borders.