Everyone likes neat definitions of things and being able to categorize what something is. Unfortunately, Bitcoin appears to defy the traditional categorization - sometimes it is viewed as a commodity, sometimes like a digital virtual currency. The problem gets more complicated when you start considering other things that could also be considered currency in some degree, but don't completely fall under the current definition, like M-Pesa or Ithaca HOURs. In this article I would like to propose a new definition of what a "currency" could be to take into account the current technology we have and follow it up with discussion on various edge cases.
The reason for writing this article is the increasing need for new regulation to address what Bitcoin is and what laws it should abide by. This in my opinion creates an opportunity to address some old definitions and create some new structures.
Definitions
- "A generally accepted form of money, including coins and paper notes, which is issued by a government and circulated within an economy. Used as a medium of exchange for goods and services, currency is the basis for trade." (Investopedia)
- "FinCEN's regulations define currency (also referred to as "real" currency) as "the coin and paper money of the United States or of any other country that [i] is designated as legal tender and that [ii] circulates and [iii] is customarily used and accepted as a medium of exchange in the country of issuance."" (FinCEN)
Generally narrowing it down to whether or not something has been issued by a government. For some Bitcoiners, that would be a fine definition of a "fiat currency", but not "currency" in general.
I would like to propose the following definition of a "currency":
Currency is an object (physical or otherwise) that:
- Is representing value different from the intrinsic value of the object used to represent it and the principal object used to back it
- Can be easily transferred between parties for the purchase of goods and services
While the wording could use some refining, I think in general the definition addresses some of the core problems I will discuss below.
- Is not expected to be forfeit when used in most it not all transactions legal under the law
Some clarifications:
- The term "object" is used loosely - can range from a physical object, a paper note, or a piece of data used to denote the currency
- First bullet point deals with the value of two things - whatever is representing the currency (physical object, paper note, piece of data), and what the currency itself is backed by (gold, oil, bread). The first is direct - if we have a gold coin representing the currency, we take the value of that gold coin. The second refers to what is backing the currency at the very core - if we have a digital IOU that denotes a claim to a paper note that is redeemable for a physical object, we take the value for the final object. This can be a bit confusing, but I'll elaborate on it further down
- The second point doesn't deal with whether it is possible to find two parties that want to transact or how much effort would it take to transfer the currency, only with the fact that it is possible. A tonne of potatoes qualifies, non-transferable reward points do not
- Last bullet points deals whether there are any restrictions placed on the object by its issuer or curator. If an object cannot be traded between parties at a risk of being forfeit (say, selling WoW gold for real-world money), it doesn't count as a currency. When something does or does not quality can be tricky to determine - one shouldn't be able to escape the definition if they create a currency and say "not tradable for pink elephants", but neither should they qualify if they say "tradable for anything in this store". A rule of thumb should be - if there are more things you can buy with it than not, then it's a currency
Country vs. not a country
Value
Currencies backed by commodities
Transferable vs non-transferable
Forfeitability
Further sub-definitions
- Fiat currencies - currencies issued by governments and mandated as a legal tender in the given country - so your traditional USD, Euro, etc.
- Concordia / virtual currencies - currencies with value not enforced by anyone, but agreed upon by the parties to the trade - like Bitcoin or gold
- Convertible currencies - currencies with a fixed exchange rate to another currency - this would include various local currencies, IOUs for currencies, etc.
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