GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES
The Future of Cryptocurrencies
![undefined and null](https://www.stratfor.com/sites/default/files/profiles/photos/Ksenia_Semenova_Cindicator-headshot.jpg)
Aug 21, 2019 | 19:28 GMT
![A visual representation of bitcoin on display on April 3, 2019, in Paris.](https://worldview.stratfor.com/sites/default/files/styles/2x1_full/public/world-non-sovereign-currency-display-gettyimages-1140163627.jpg?itok=6hthxaym)
Cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin, visually represented in this photo illustration, hold tremendous potential as an alternative over traditional banking, but they deeply concern many governments.
(CHESNOT/Getty Images)
Highlights
- Cryptocurrencies hold tremendous potential as an alternative over traditional banking, but they deeply concern many governments, including lawmakers in the United States.
- Growing geopolitical instability will increase the desire for a decentralized nonsovereign digital currency no matter what the United States wants. And interest in digital assets can increase when a country such as Zimbabwe is undergoing economic upheaval.
- But as developments in the Marshall Islands and elsewhere indicate, cryptocurrencies need not be nonsovereign, nor have benefits limited to individuals.
Subscribe Now
SubscribeAlready have an account?