Is Facebook’s money—Libra—funny money, or a threat to all currencies? Or is it just a giant scam to transfer people’s cash into Facebook?
Facebook’s proposed currency, Libra—or as NPR put it, Facebucks—has created a storm. Libertarians see Libra, a variant of a cryptocurrency backed by Facebook’s big bucks and the bevy of companies that it has put together, bringing the day when cryptocurrencies will truly challenge all global currencies and fulfilling economist Friedrich Hayek’s dream of The Denationalization of Money. Or perhaps, as a Hacker Noon article by Erasmus Elsner puts it, “Facebook has Found a place to Park its $40bn+ Cash Reserves and Everyone Thinks its [sic] about Crypto”—a clever way of taking in free cash without paying interest, and parking it wherever it wants.
Buried in the Libra White Paper are a couple of sentences that say Libra will also enable a global digital identity for people (read: a global Aadhaar). All this from Facebook, which is under fire for mass-scale violations of privacy. From a platform that literally extorts its users for visibility, the “real” currency of the narcissistic digital age: If you want your posts to be seen, pay us.
It is not my intention to have a close-up look at Libra. Instead, I am going to focus on what money is, not in theory, but in practice. Money is what we use for transactions; it is what we put in a bank—or under the mattress—if we want to store it. Simply put, it is both a means of exchange and a store of value. It gets its legitimacy as either of the two. The state backs it; the guarantee is on every note from the Central Bank of the state. All other forms of “money,” for example that used by Alibaba—Alipay—or Paytm—derive their value from the central currency, and are held in what can be called the “digital wallets” that we keep with these companies.
Most people see these wallets as temporary storage for real cash that can be used to make mobile payments. In China, most people use WeChat or Alipay for payments, even small ones. Both cash transactions and use of credit card payments are reducing in China, something that may also happen in different parts of the world.
Facebook’s Libra attempts two things simultaneously. It challenges all global currencies as it will be possible for payments to take place within Facebook’s ecosystem without the use of any specific currency. It is a currency backed by a private company, not a government. So is completely outside all currency controls of governments. Of course Facebook is using cryptocurrency as a substitute for the sovereign guarantee that every state extends for its currency. But let us be clear that the credibility of Libra or Facebucks lies in its being backed by Facebook, not its crypto algorithm.
Of course, the real world is not that simple. Yes, no country will be able to regulate Facebook’s money. Except the United States. Let us not forget that Facebook is a U.S. company functioning under U.S. law. It is bound by the same laws that apply to U.S. banks. Remember when U.S. sanctions were imposed on Iran, and all its money lying in U.S. banks—and even outside the U.S.—was seized by the U.S.? In fact, the return of these monies is one part of the Iran-U.S. Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) deal, a part Trump has reneged on. So let’s not fool ourselves; Facebook’s money will not be under the legal control of any government except the United States.