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email? When was the last time you pasted photos into an album instead of stored them on your mobile phone? When was the last time you played a CD, cassette tape, or vinyl LP rather than listened to Pandora or Spotify? If the Internet could transform letter writing, photography, and music in one generation, it is naïve to think the Internet will not do the same to financial services and money. In a few years' time, writing a paper check will be as archaic as sending film to Kodak to be developed. So will sending money by wire transfer—or even via mobile apps like Venmo or Square Cash—since all these ostensibly “digital” methods still rely on costly intermediaries, such as banks and credit-card companies. Just over the horizon is a world in which we will soon send things of value directly to the recipient, mobile device to mobile device, without any third-party needing to assist—or take a cut.

      Clearly, the private sector is way ahead of governments and central banks in exploring digital money. But lately, governments are starting to react. Most of the world's central banks are now taking a serious look at a sovereign form of cryptocurrency, called central bank digital currency.

      The world as we know it today is one of competing currency zones in which monetary systems, banking, and foreign accounts are generally oriented to one reserve currency or another. Think of the US dollar zone and the “Eurozone.” As I will explain in this book, those old currency zones may well be replaced tomorrow by widely networked and integrated national digital currency zones. There likely will be a Chinese digital currency zone and perhaps a Digital Euro zone. In these zones, central bank digital currencies will be networked through distributed ledgers with all important financial functions and transactions—including retail credit and business lending, domestic and global payments, securities and commodities trading, and central bank monetary policy—under the control and watchful eye and sway of powerful central banks. The increase in speed, efficiency, and velocity of money could turbocharge economic growth. Such centralized economic and financial control for major world economies would be unprecedented. It would be the utmost expression of the Internet of Value: fully-integrated, networked, digital economies.

      If we do not act wisely and quickly, however, this new Internet wave will lay bare the shortcomings of America's aging, analog financial systems. Worse, it will mean that the values of our nondemocratic economic competitors—state surveillance, social credit systems, law subservient to the state, and centrally planned economic activity—will be embedded into the future of money, diminishing the vibrancy and health of the global economy, individual liberty, and human advancement.

      This book is about the digital transformation of money and how it will change the lives of everyone in the global economy. But it is also a more personal story. It's about how I, a Margaret Thatcher–admiring, free market Republican, helped build one of the world's leading derivatives trading platforms only to find myself in the epicenter of the 2008 financial crisis. That experience led me to support the financial market reforms in the Dodd–Frank Act—a law that I now view as the last major “patch” of the long-standing analog, account-based financial system.

      Those experiences led to my appointment to the CFTC by President Barack Obama. They also led to my subsequent elevation to CFTC chairman by President Donald Trump—after confirmation by a unanimous Senate.

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      Undoubtedly, the continuing evolution of the Internet of Value will come in fits and starts. There will be bubbles, crashes, mistakes, and successes. There will be fiascos and criminal behavior as with any profound change. There will be enormous business disruption and even more business innovation that still cannot even be imagined.

      Yet, the technology will not be stopped. Suppression in any one jurisdiction will just move the evolution to another. The direction of travel for this innovation is increasingly clear and, frankly, amazing. Bitcoin is just the tip of the iceberg. The question for American policy makers is whether they have the courage to let this new wave of innovation take place here in an intelligently regulated fashion that contributes to our economic benefit or irresolution to force it to happen elsewhere.

      The question for a free people is whether they will make their voices heard in the design and operation of the digital future of money. Will the reasonable expectation of privacy from both commercial and governmental surveillance provided by paper money be found in digital money? Will a digital dollar or non-sovereign forms of digital money secure individual economic privacy against government surveillance guaranteed by the US Constitution and expected by the American people? Who will decide?

      I am convinced—and I hope to persuade you in this book—that the ongoing evolution of the Internet will revolutionize money and banking in the same way it has revolutionized communications, photography, retail shopping, business meetings, and entertainment. It is naive to think that it will not. Yet, the venerable global financial services industry and its central bank overseers have been slow to even acknowledge its arrival. Some have a vested interest in the old infrastructure. The western economies will not keep pace if the matter is left to politically browbeaten bank executives, political protectors of the status quo, a few snarky financial journalists, and rigid central bankers. We need officials with courage, determination, foresight, and the willingness to take risk.

      That battle is being waged today. It will take daring and determination to regain the initiative. This book is about summoning that courage—both

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