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Topic: [2017-10-16] Why IMF Wants to Enter Crypto Market With its Own Coin (Read 257 times)

newbie
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Countries with weak economies and unstable currencies can use not the dollars but the crypto currency as a reserve unit. With such a statement made at a conference on the 20th anniversary of the independence of the Bank of England, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Christine Lagarde.
legendary
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Welt Am Draht
but ones that they can control and issue.

Wut?

They don't need to create a crypto and it wouldn't be one anyway. They already have digital currencies they control and issue. There is no need to go any further as they're as far along as they need to be.

The only thing I can see happening is them following though on the world reserve they were talking about which'll be made up of a selection of currencies. Again, this has nothing to do with crypto.
legendary
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Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
Yesterday Poland refused tranche of the IMF. Gradually, States are beginning to understand that this organization was not created in order to help the economies of underdeveloped countries. They are created in order to put into debt countries that take their loans and make them for a long time is not solvent. Using cryptocurrency this can be done easily and for free. I don't think they will find many willing to take such a loan.
Centralized organizations seek the profit of those financing them and don't really care for the benefit of nations they are financing. EU is a prime example of how this principle works in practice. See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-speed_Europe

I don't think the cryptocurrency structure would work for IMF, most of its aspects go against the organization's interests.
sr. member
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Live cams shows pimped with cryptocurrency
Yesterday Poland refused tranche of the IMF. Gradually, States are beginning to understand that this organization was not created in order to help the economies of underdeveloped countries. They are created in order to put into debt countries that take their loans and make them for a long time is not solvent. Using cryptocurrency this can be done easily and for free. I don't think they will find many willing to take such a loan.
sr. member
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Merit: 250
Christine Lagarde, IMF Managing Director, has had many positive things to say about the potential of digital currencies and their disruptive model, but she has now added that the IMF would not rule out creating its own version of it.

Recently, Russia entered the decentralized digital currency space with its ‘CryptoRuble’ and it could be that organisations, as well as states, see the value of digital currencies, but ones that they can control and issue.

About to see massive disruptions

The IMF head has said before that she pictures her organisation playing a crucial role in regulating cryptocurrencies globally, but in a positive manner as she seems to be on the side of Bitcoin.

Lagarde is of the opinion that Global financial institutions are taking risks by not watching and understanding emerging financial tech products, and that are already starting to shake up the financial services and global payments system.

"I think that we are about to see massive disruptions," Lagarde said at the IMF Annual Meeting in Washington D.C.

IMF to develop its own

Remarking on something that the IMF has already created, comparing it to digital currencies, Lagarde said that the IMF would not rule out developing its own cryptocurrency in the future.

She pointed to the IMF's Special Drawing Right (SDR), a currency the IMF created to serve as an international reserve asset, that could incorporate technology similar to cryptocurrencies.

"What we will be looking into is how this currency, the special drawing right, can actually use the technology to be more efficient and less costly," she said.

The IMF is looking to make its way into the crypto space, and with their hopes of regulating it, Lagarde says it makes sense simply due to the cross border nature of it.

"My hope is that we can participate in that process because I see that as a very cross-border process," she added.

https://cointelegraph.com/news/why-imf-wants-to-enter-crypto-market-with-its-own-coin
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