BCN-04, 05 European governments move to veto Facebook’s digital money

243

ZCZC

BCN-04

EU-US-G20-TRADE-BANKING

European governments move to veto Facebook’s digital money

WASHINGTON, Oct 19, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Major European players are joining
forces to block Facebook’s proposed digital currency because of the dangers
it poses to national sovereignty, French Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire
announced Friday.

The firm opposition from France, Italy and Germany adds to the mounting
resistance faced by the tech giant’s troubled foray into digital finance.

The Group of 20 economies also warned Friday of “serious” risks of money
laundering, fraud and illicit finance posed by Libra, the social media
network’s proposed digital currency.

Italy, Germany and France will take unspecified steps in the coming weeks
“to show clearly that Libra is unwelcome in Europe,” Le Maire told reporters
on the sidelines of the annual meetings of the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund in Washington.

“We will not allow a private company to have the same power, the same
monetary power as sovereign states,” he added.

“The major difference between Facebook and governments is that we are
subject to democratic control, that is the control of the people.”

The Group of Seven economies on Thursday had said any reserve-backed
digital currency like Libra — known as a stablecoin — would require a sound
legal framework before entering circulation.

But European officials say they want to go even further by blocking the
currency outright.

Like Le Maire, German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said Friday he was
“very skeptical” about Libra.

“I favor not allowing the establishment of such a global currency because
that is the responsibility of democratic states,” he said.

But Scholz said he recognized the need for banking reforms to make cross-
border payments more simple, cheap and speedy.

“At the same time, we must protect the autonomy of democratic states,” he
said.

MORE/HR/0928

ZCZC

BCN-05

EU-US-G20-TRADE-BANKING 2 LAST WASHINGTON

– Answer: a clear ‘no’ –

Italian Finance Minister Roberto Gualtieri agreed, telling reporters on
Friday there was a “strong consensus” among nations not to allow private
currencies.

Libra also has faced challenges from within as major financial and
commercial players in recent weeks backed out of the project, including Visa,
Mastercard, eBay, Stripe, PayPal and the online travel firm Bookings
Holdings.

But the Libra Association has tried to ward off a blockade by saying it
will address the concerns posed by government officials.

“I repeat our priority today is to work with regulators to answer their
legitimate questions and provide all necessary assurances,” said Bertrand
Perez, managing director of the association.

Le Maire, however, appeared to rule out such cooperation with Facebook,
noting that the social media giant planned to tie its cryptocurrency to a
basket of reserve assets.

“All Facebook would have to do would be to decide to use more or fewer
dollars or euros to affect the exchange rate between the euro and the dollar,
and thus have a direct impact on trade, industry and nations which use the
dollar or euro as their base currency,” he said.

This could harm monetary policy and affect governments’ efficiency, he
added.

“Do we want to put monetary policy in the hands of a private company like
Facebook? My answer is clearly no,” he said.

Still, he said he was not opposed to the creation of a digital currency,
which France could develop “in a European framework.”

“The right answer is not a private digital currency under the control of
one of the largest multinationals on the planet,” he said, referring to
Facebook’s billions of users.

The Libra association officially launched Monday in Geneva with 21
founding members, including the telecoms firms Vodafone and Iliad, as well as
tech outfits Uber, Spotify and Farfetch, blockchain operations such as
Anchorage, Xapo and Coinbase and the venture capital firm Andreessen
Horowitz.

BSS/AFP/HR/0930