Start your day with intelligence. Get The OODA Daily Pulse.
We continue with our brief survey of crypto and digital currency initiatives from around the globe, all of which are officially sanctioned to enhance national competitive advantage (in the event crypto overtakes the US dollar as the global reserve currency). It is the cumulative adoption rate of state-sanctioned crypto and digital currency legalization and regulation that will propel this innovative system for value exchange as a global currency standard.
In previous posts, we provided an analysis of crypto and digital currency initiatives in China, El Salvador, Panama, Ukraine, India, Argentina, and Russia. We also provided an analysis of the major central bank digital currency (CBDC) initiative in the U.S., Project Hamilton, which is a technical collaboration between the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and The MIT Digital Currency Initiative.
We now set our sights on Colombia, a country that has aligned its blockchain deployment to address the recent painful, war-torn history fueled by the vagaries of land rights and ownership (which have an even longer historical precedent in the South American country).
Fiscal policy in Colombia is, well, complicated: “There’s never a great time to impose higher taxes on funeral services — but doing it in the middle of a raging pandemic is an especially bad move. Yet that was one of a number of measures that the Colombian government proposed [in May of 2021] in a controversial new tax bill that has provoked the country’s largest and most violent protests in decades. In the days [after the new tax bill was enacted], the finance minister…resigned, the tax reform has been pulled, and President Iván Duque has called for fresh dialogue with activists, union leaders, and opposition politicians. But demonstrations, vandalism, and deadly clashes with police have only intensified. Two dozen people are dead, 40 are missing, and the UN has criticized Colombian police for their heavy-handed response.
But these protests are about more than taxes. For several years, a large part of Colombian society has been upset about rising inequality, an epidemic of violence against human rights leaders, rising crime in the cities, and poor healthcare and education. Just before the COVID crisis started, in late 2019, mass protests over these issues shook Bogotá for days. Today’s protests are in part a resurgence of grievances bottled up — and made worse — by the pandemic.
In 2022, Colombians elected a new president. Term limits kept Duque from running again [and the] social crisis…boosted the fortunes of Senator Gustavo Petro, a leftwing former mayor of Bogotá who got his start in political life as part of the M-19 urban guerrilla movement. A [2021] poll showed Petro would get close to 40 percent of the vote if the ballot were held [in May 2021], an increase of 15 points since last fall (source in Spanish): “That a leftwinger should be so popular is a sea change in Colombia, long a center-right country in which decades of war with Marxist-inspired militants — and the recent disaster next door in socialist-led Venezuela — had created a stigma around leftist politics at the national level.” (1)
In June 2022, Gustavo Petro defeated Rodolfo Hernández in the Colombian election for President:
It is in this climate of economic innovation spurred on by grassroots political pressure that “Colombia’s government has launched a partnership with Ripple Labs, the company behind the cryptocurrency XRP, to put land titles on the blockchain, part of a plan to rectify land distribution efforts so unfair they’ve led to decades of armed conflict. The project, built by blockchain development company Peersyst Technology and Ripple, will permanently store and authenticate property titles on XRPL—Ripple’s public blockchain. This will help eliminate bureaucracy and hopefully make land distribution more equal…” (4)
📢 Thrilled to announce that after a year of development with @GobDigitalCO @Ministerio_TIC, we launched the first #NationalLandRegistry on top of #XRPL #Main #Blockchain for all Colombians!🇨🇴
Find more how @Peersyst worked with @Ripple to achieve it! 👇https://t.co/PuYncDB0qv
— Peersyst Technology (@Peersyst) July 1, 2022
As reported by Mat Di Salvo at decrypt.com:
To register for OODAcon, go to: OODAcon 2022 – The Future of Exponential Innovation & Disruption
It should go without saying that tracking threats are critical to informing your actions. This includes reading our OODA Daily Pulse, which will give you insights into the nature of the threat and risks to business operations.
Use OODA Loop to improve your decision-making in any competitive endeavor. Explore OODA Loop
The greatest determinant of your success will be the quality of your decisions. We examine frameworks for understanding and reducing risk while enabling opportunities. Topics include Black Swans, Gray Rhinos, Foresight, Strategy, Strategies, Business Intelligence, and Intelligent Enterprises. Leadership in the modern age is also a key topic in this domain. Explore Decision Intelligence
We track the rapidly changing world of technology with a focus on what leaders need to know to improve decision-making. The future of tech is being created now and we provide insights that enable optimized action based on the future of tech. We provide deep insights into Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, Cloud Computing, Quantum Computing, Security Technology, and Space Technology. Explore Disruptive/Exponential Tech
Security and resiliency topics include geopolitical and cyber risk, cyber conflict, cyber diplomacy, cybersecurity, nation-state conflict, non-nation state conflict, global health, international crime, supply chain, and terrorism. Explore Security and Resiliency
The OODA community includes a broad group of decision-makers, analysts, entrepreneurs, government leaders, and tech creators. Interact with and learn from your peers via online monthly meetings, OODA Salons, the OODAcast, in-person conferences, and an online forum. For the most sensitive discussions interact with executive leaders via a closed Wickr channel. The community also has access to a member-only video library. Explore The OODA Community.