Thursday, 28 September 2017

Japanese Banks Are Planning to Launch J-Coin, a Digital Currency Meant to Kill Off Cash

quote [ Japan's central bank is backing a scheme that could see the the cash-dependent country move toward a digital currency built on blockchain technology. ]

Hello, do you take credit or J-coin?

Japanese Banks Are Planning to Launch J-Coin, a Digital Currency Meant to Kill Off Cash

Japan's central bank is backing a scheme that could see the the cash-dependent country move toward a digital currency built on blockchain technology.
The J Coin, as it's to be called, is under development by a group of Japanese banks with the blessing of financial regulators. According to the Financial Times (paywall), it's meant to launch in time for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics as a way to streamline the country's financial system.
At the moment, some 70 percent of all financial transactions in Japan use cash—a far higher amount than occurs in most developed countries, where cash has been on the decline for some time now. Relying so heavily on hard currency exacts costs in the form of transaction and handling fees, as well as the expenses associated with moving all those notes and coins around. Cash transactions are also easier to hide from regulators, and India, for example, cited shutting down the black market as one reason it decided to push aggressively towards digital money.
The idea for J-Coin is that it would sit alongside the Japanese yen, exchanged at a one-to-one rate, and be offered as a free service. In return, the banks that operate it would get detailed data on how people use it (as we've discussed before, that will indeed make people easier to track).
Whether or not the consortium adopts a blockchain-based currency, though, remains to be seen. At the moment one of the country's big financial institutions, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, is testing MUFG coin, which is based on blockchain. The FT reports that some 1,600 of the company's employees already use it as a way to pay for business expenses, for example. There have been talks about whether MUFG coin might join the J-Coin initiative, but nothing has been decided yet.
If it does, it would join a growing number of government-backed efforts around the world to explore blockchain-based currencies as the future of their money systems (for an in-depth look at the trend, see our recent piece, "Governments Are Testing Their Own Cryptocurrencies").
SOURCE: FINANCIAL TIMES ($), BUSINESS INSIDER IMAGE CREDIT: ANDRE BENS | UNSPLASH

Posted by Michael Reilly
September 26th, 2017 4:44PM
Michael Reilly
[SFW] [business] [+3 Interesting]
[by lilmookieesquire@12:11amGMT]

Comments

cb361 said @ 7:36am GMT on 28th Sep [Score:2 Insightful]
It was difficult to transact legitimate business with cash in the Sprawl; in Japan, it was already illegal.
eggboy said @ 1:02am GMT on 29th Sep [Score:1 Interesting]
A legit online currency tied to a successful modern economy, during the rise of the supercorporations and just before the collapse of America. So this is how we get nuyen.
steele said @ 1:08am GMT on 28th Sep
I'm going to miss Japan. That's where I get all my anime.
cb361 said @ 7:38am GMT on 28th Sep
Set up an anime mining farm.
steele said @ 4:14pm GMT on 28th Sep
Way back when I first started playing around with how neural networks worked (like old SE neg days) my breakthrough was the realization that using a very large Recurrent Neural Network and a big enough (obscenely so) dataset would result in episodes of Naruto that no one had ever seen before.
lilmookieesquire said @ 4:16pm GMT on 28th Sep
I thought we had hit peek Naruto. Are you saying there is some kind of infinite Naruto generator?! Hold on, I have to call some people.
steele said @ 4:20pm GMT on 28th Sep [Score:1 Good]
The universe is actually a Naruto generator. All that talk about it being a simulation? Some weeaboo outside our understanding is just trying it to get himself new Naruto episodes. We're lucky Boruto started or they might've pulled the plug and gone on to the next iteration.
conception said @ 7:33pm GMT on 28th Sep
Man, if Japan goes cashless, cash is doomed sooner than later. Japan fucking loves paper currency. They have a postal system specifically for sending it. Not to mention the fairly out in public organized crime.

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