Many countries are still grappling with the issues of crypto-currencies such as Bitcoin, of which there are at least 70. China’s central bank, for example, has ordered financial institutions to halt Bitcoin-related services and products.

With the value of Bitcoin increasing to more than $1000 this month after social gaming firm Zynga said it would begin accepting the virtual currency as payment, the question is: can crypto-currencies can become real currency?

From the perspective of the Reserve Bank in New Zealand, crypto-currencies are not currency, or more specifically not legal tender. They are payment systems.

A bank representative says the consistent message emerging from central banks and governments around the world is:

Digital or crypto-currencies are not legal tender

They are taxable assets, as with other financial instruments

Entities that provide (or facilitate) crypto-currency platforms or instruments are captured under laws relating to money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT legislation).

”The Reserve Bank has a watching brief on the development of digital payment systems and crypto-currencies,” he says.

But the bank hasn’t done any analysis of uptake or usage.

”While crypto-currencies have some of the attributes of real currency (reliable means of exchange, unit of account, store of value), they don’t have the ultimate backstop that sovereign currencies have,” the spokesperson says. ”They are not backed by the power of the state insisting that the currency is legal tender (i.e. must be accepted as payment for a debt). Tax obligations can be settled/extinguished by ‘tendering’ the requisite amount of legal currency but governments have no obligations to accept other forms of payment such as foreign currencies or crypto-currencies.”

Common concern about crypto-currency

It is the same argument put forth by established financial institutions worldwide, even as additional businesses agree to accept Bitcoin for their goods or services, and the virtual currency's fans lobby governments to be more accommodating of this alternate currency enabled by digital communications.

Two contrasting examples, however, illustrate the concern of established financial agencies:

Real currency: “If a person sells goods and receives $100 in return, then they can be confident that the Reserve Bank is doing its utmost to maintain the quality of our currency as a medium of exchange. And the Reserve Bank ultimately has the backing of the government, with its ability to legislate and enforce rights and responsibilities.”

Crypto-currency: “If a person sells goods and receives 100 crypto-currency units, the seller of the goods must rely on the crypto-currency system to ensure that they get their full 100 units’ worth of value. If they don’t receive that value then they don’t have the powers of the state behind them. At best they can try their own enforcement actions backed by their own individual power and resources.”

The issue with Bitcoin, for example, is transactions are irreversible. An unfortunate British owner found that out when he threw away a hard drive, forgetting he had 4.6 million pounds in bitcoins stored on it.

However, a London-based company has set up a storage service that insures deposits of the digital currency against loss and theft. Elliptic Vault stores private encrypted keys to bitcoins on offline servers in a secure location. The company is underwritten by Lloyds of London.

The attraction of digital currency is largely around the small fees charged by digital currency exchanges to convert it to local currency: perhaps less than 1 per cent. That clearly is also an easy opportunity to launder money because no details are recorded of the owner of the digital currency. Rather, it is like a bearer bond where whoever has it can cash it.

Another tool of cyber-crime?

In New Zealand, the Department of Internal Affairs’ anti money laundering unit says it is in touch with some firms which have expressed interest in offering digital currencies and is keeping up to date with developments internationally.

Kate Reid, manager financial integrity, says no firms are currently operational in New Zealand but if they do set up they will have to ensure they meet their obligations under legislation. This means they will have to have in place:

A Risk Assessment of the money laundering and financing of terrorism that they could expect in the course of running their business

An AML/CFT Program that includes procedures to detect, deter, manage and mitigate money laundering and the financing of terrorism

A Compliance Officer appointed to administer and maintain their AML/CFT program

Customer Due Diligence processes including customer identification and verification of identity

Suspicious Transaction Reporting, Auditing and Annual Reporting systems and processes.

”It would be our role to ensure the companies meet those obligations,” she says. “This is very similar to other regulated parties and it would be relatively easily to adapt our current systems if needed.”

This story, "Are bitcoin's chances of acceptance getting better?" was originally published by Computerworld New Zealand .