Japan's Next Economic Boom Will Be Bitcoin And Blockchain Fuelled
By
Japan's economy
— which for years has struggled to return to its 1980's growth levels — could
be about to boom once again, thanks to bitcoin, cryptocurrency and blockchain
technology.
At the Japan Blockchain Conference this week in
Tokyo (the first of what's expected to become a yearly event) the chief
executive of financial services giant SBI Holdings Yoshitaka Kitao said he is
betting that blockchain related technologies will fuel the next boom for the
Japanese economy after decades of economic malaise.
In the 1970s, Japan had the world's
second-largest GDP after the U.S. and this boom continued through to the 1980s.
However, by the early 1990s Japan's economy had stalled, plunging the country
into what has been called the "lost decade" of growth.
It has previously been suggested Japan's
economy could be kick-started by a "technological boom."
Improved mobile connectivity through the
long-awaited 5G technology, along with the Internet of Things (IoT), rapid
increases in computing power and artificial intelligence, could combine to
trigger an economic boom, in which Japan is well placed to lead the way.
SBI is investing in companies in Japan and
across east Asia through its $460 million so-called AI & Blockchain Fund,
established earlier this year.
"We want to take blockchain beyond
financial," Yoshitaka Kitao said. "There's a lot of speculative
demand around cryptocurrencies, which is why the price is going up so quickly,
but people need to think about how these technologies are being used in real
life and how they can improve people's businesses."
Yoshitaka expects this boom to happen within
the next few years and has been steering SBI towards blockchain and
cryptocurrencies as a result.
Earlier this year it was revealed SBI is
planning to launch a cryptocurrency exchange this summer and has also invested
in a renewable energy wind farm to begin mining Bitcoin Cash — which Yoshitaka
believes is more viable than the original bitcoin.
"Bitcoin is too expensive and people are
just holding it and hoping it increase in value," said Yoshitaka.
Aaron McDonald, the chief executive of
decentralised app marketplace Centrality (which closed a $80 million initial
coin offering (ICO) earlier this year), expects Japan and east Asia to be the
core driver of global bitcoin, cryptocurrency, and blockchain adoption.
New Zealand-based Centrality's ICO was
predominantly bought by investors from Japan, where one third of adults have
used a cryptocurrency wallet.
"We're focused on the region because
people in Japan are far further ahead than the rest of the world when it comes
to blockchain and crytocurrencies," said McDonald, who agrees the
blockchain boom is just a few years away.
Tezuka Mitsuru, the chief executive of
blockchain investment advisory company CTIA, one of Centrality's major
investors, said: "If blockchain is integrated into the Japanese market it
will be a great tool and prevent the market from declining."
This week it was announced Centrality has
secured a partnership with China tech giant InfiniVision and Japan-based Jasmy
— founded by the former president of the Sony Corporation.
However, there are fears heavy-handed
regulation could suffocate the blockchain and cryptocurrency industry in Japan,
with the government clamping down on crypto exchanges earlier this year in the
wake of a number of high-profile thefts.
Fears of a global regulatory crackdown have
contributed to a sharp fall in the bitcoin price in 2018, after a rapid rise
last year.
The likes of illegal ICOs, money laundering,
tax evasion, thefts, exchange outages, excessive speculation have all become a
worry for regulators this year.
While Japan has broadly chosen a more
accommodating approach to blockchain and cryptocurrencies, last year
introducing a law that resulted in 16 licensed trading venues, in early March
it also cracked down, penalizing six exchanges and telling another to revise
its management structure among other changes.
Published in: https://www.forbes.com/
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