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Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Thursday, April 16 2020 - 20:15
AsiaNet
Crypto.com Supported The Economist Intelligence Unit Research on Digital Currencies
HONG KONG, April 16, 2020, /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/--

- Digital currencies showed the most growth opportunity for payments: 
   - 20% of people said they don't currently use them but plan to in the next 
year, higher than any other payment method studied in the research, a trend 
that may accelerate as a result of Covid-19. 
   - 34% of respondents considered online payments to be digital currency's 
main function, while only 24% cited "short-term investment" as a reason for its 
use.
- 54% of respondents said they would consider a digital currency issued by 
their government (e.g. CBDC) trustworthy, compared to only 26% who said the 
same about currently available cryptocurrencies; however, cryptocurrency was 
the most recognised type of digital currency in the study.

If you are unfamiliar with digital currencies, you are in the minority. A full 
85% of survey respondents of global consumers have owned, used or heard of 
decentralised digital currency such as a cryptocurrency according to an 
Economist Intelligence Unit survey conducted over January and February of this 
year. The study, Digimentality—Fear and favouring of digital currency 
[https://digitalcurrency.economist.com/ ], sponsored by Crypto.com, also showed 
that in the developing world, awareness reached 92%.

The study underscored a trend that is likely to accelerate as Covid-19 concerns 
mount and governments take physical cash out of circulation to help stem the 
virus spread. The global survey suggests that societies across the world were 
already leaning toward cashless options for daily purchases, based on 
convenience and traceability reasons. 

"Our report showed that while the use of cryptocurrencies amongst the general 
public is low, people are very curious and optimistic about them for the 
future," said Kris Marszalek, CEO of Crypto.com. "This bodes very well for our 
industry and comes at a pivotal time when trust in financial markets is 
wavering and more people are turning their attention to the growing range of 
digital currencies that continue to present a clear plan B to our traditional 
financial structures. We still have much work to do to get crypto into every 
wallet, but that mission is much more difficult without valuable insights into 
what the general public is thinking."

"Covid-19 wasn't part of the original survey parameters since it didn't exist 
at the survey's onset," explains Jason Wincuinas, senior editor for thought 
leadership with the Economist Intelligence Unit, who headed the research. "But 
we can see in events since the survey finished in February—such as debate in 
the US congress over introducing a 'digital dollar' in recent weeks—that this 
is becoming a structural concern for society. What's interesting is how China 
and Sweden were already looking at digital currency as potential pillars of 
their monetary systems. For other countries, maybe it takes an emergency like 
covid-19 to move the needle."

In the survey, physical credit cards were shown to be the most popular payment 
choice overall; cash was only the third most used option. Online banking, 
online payment services and mobile apps on smartphones all captured a large 
share of consumer transactions. Digital currencies (which includes 
cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, Ether, XRP, etc) were still the least cited 
option but they captured the largest share of respondents who said they planned 
to try it within the next 12 months.

For expert analysis, The Economist Intelligence Unit consulted Eva Julin, 
deputy head general secretariat at Sveriges Riksbank (Sweden's Central Bank), 
who heads the bank's evaluation of issuing a digital currency and Antony Lewis, 
fintech advisor to The Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) of Hong Kong and 
author of the book "The Basics of Bitcoins and Blockchains: An Introduction to 
Cryptocurrencies and the Technology that Powers Them.

Commenting on the research, Mr Wincuinas said: "The trend toward cashless 
payments is an irresistible force. And it was very interesting to observe 
greater eagerness and expectations within the developing economies we tested. 
Given that these countries also tend to have higher rates of people using 
mobile devices to go online and younger populations—who also tend to have 
faster takeup of technology generally—it could be a harbinger of what's to come 
with digital currencies. Combined with the fact that we saw more resistance to 
cryptocurrencies and digital payments in developed economies, I think it's 
clear there could be another leap-frog effect in the waiting as economies like 
China push ahead with digital ways to pay, and economies with older payment 
infrastructures play a wait-and-see game. But covid-19 could change everything."

About the research

Digimentality—Fear and favouring of digital currency 
[https://digitalcurrency.economist.com/ ] is a report from The Economist 
Intelligence Unit, sponsored by Crypto.com, exploring the extent to which 
digital payments are trusted by consumers and what barriers may exist to basic 
monetary functions becoming predominantly electronic or digital. The analysis 
is based on a survey of 3,048 people conducted in January and February 2020. 
About half of the respondents came from developed economies and half from 
developing ones. All respondents had bought a product or service within the 
past 12 months using some kind of digital payment. 

About Crypto.com

Crypto.com was founded in 2016 on a simple belief: it's a basic human right for 
everyone to control their money, data and identity. With over 1 million users 
on its platform today, Crypto.com provides a powerful alternative to 
traditional financial services, turning its vision of "cryptocurrency in every 
wallet" into reality, one customer at a time. Crypto.com is built on a solid 
foundation of security, privacy and compliance and is the first cryptocurrency 
company in the world to have CCSS Level 3, ISO27001:2013 and PCI:DSS 3.2.1, 
Level 1 compliance. Crypto.com is headquartered in Hong Kong with a 250+ strong 
team. Find out more by visiting https://crypto.com.

About The Economist Intelligence Unit

The EIU is the thought leadership, research and analysis division of The 
Economist Group and the world leader in global business intelligence for 
executives. We uncover novel and forward-looking perspectives with access to 
over 650 expert analysts and editors across 200 countries worldwide. More 
information can be found on www.eiuperspectives.economist.com. Follow us on 
Twitter [https://twitter.com/TheEIU ], LinkedIn 
[https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-economist-intelligence-unit/ ] and 
Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/TheEIU ].

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SOURCE: Crypto.com