We're being sold a decentralised future, one where self-enforcing (smart) contracts and micro-transactions mediate our relationship with the world around us. Apparently this will democratise trust and reshape society, or so the streak of technological determines that runs through society tells us. Though while technology is a significant force shaping society, it is not the most important. There are deeper forces at work in society, and while blockchain is a sign post that the future will be different from the past, the future we're racing toward is not the one we're being sold.
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The Future of Exchanging Value is Social, Not Technological
1. Headline Verdana Bold
The future of exchanging value
Blundering toward a decentralised future
Peter Evans-Greenwood, 28/10/2017
We're being sold a decentralised future, one where self-enforcing (smart) contracts and micro-transactions
mediate our relationship with the world around us. Apparently this will democratise trust and reshape society, or so
the streak of technological determines that runs through society tells us. Though while technology is a significant
force shaping society, it is not the most important. There are deeper forces at work in society, and while blockchain
is a sign post that the future will be different from the past, the future we're racing toward is not the one we're being
sold.
The future of financial services â weâre told â is one where
⢠micro transactions in crypto currencies enabled by blockchain
⢠with social lending and global platforms (some of which might be distributed)
⢠existing financial services will be disintermediated
⢠established financial professions destroyed
⢠sovereign currencies will be marginalised, reminders of a centralised past
This isnât necessarily so.
Thereâs a strong thread of technological determinism in society
⢠We feel that we live in a technological age
⢠⌠and the development of new technologies is reshaping society in their image
This thread might have even strengthened recently
⢠Rise of the robots: Machine learning and automation of white collar jobs
Weâre forgetting that
⢠Technology change isnât a one way street: technology changes society but society also changes technology
⢠Our view is also coloured by the role technology has in our culture: the Gollum story
What weâve been seeing at C4tE is that the balance between technological and social determinism has tipped to
the social
⢠The future will be shaped by a mixture of inherent human needs and cultural preferences
⢠We can also see the outline of this future and itâs a lot more interesting than cryptocurrences etc. suggest
Who is Centre for the Edge then
⢠Every team needs an explorer
⢠ânowistsâ rather than âfuturistsâ
⢠educators, in that we intervene, poking the community to help them adapt
Our interest is in identifying and articulating the importance choices we have today that will shape the future
⌠and what weâre seeing is a confluence of social preferences come together to reshape the commercial
landscape in unexpected ways
⢠Itâs a social change, not a technological one
2. âAlthough technology might be a prime element
in many public issues, nontechnical factors take
precedence in technology-policy decisions.ââ¨
â¨
âMelvin Kranzbergâs 4th law
2
Kranzberg, Melvin. âTechnology and History: âKranzbergâs Laws.ââ Technology and Culture 27, no. 3 (1986): 544â
60. doi:10.2307/3105385.
A common mistake is to think that solutions to technical problems are not subject to mushy social considerations
Many social factors are involved in what are seen as purely technical decisions
Itâs social pressure that shapes:
⢠which technologies can be / are pursued
⢠how they can be / are used
Itâs rare that the âobjectively bestâ technology will be the one society adopts:
⢠Copper-cooled engines, victim of the need for short term profit
⢠VHS trounced technically superior Beta
⢠genetically engineered crops
⢠Ford Nucleon and the optimism of the 50s
Technically âsweetâ solutions do not always triumph of political and social forces
This is particularly true now as weâre seeing social change rather than technological change
⢠no new maths in blockchain / bitcoin
⢠no new maths in AI
What weâre seeing is an environmental shift
⢠which is something weâll return to later
3. 3
Itâs through this lens that we need to consider money: the means we typically use to exchange value
Weâre told that we use money due to âthe double coincidence of wantsâ
⢠a pervasive assumption promoted by economists
⢠âwe use money, as barter is awkwardâ
History is then seen as the incremental monetarization of society
⢠itâs more convenient than the alternatives
⢠itâs becoming ever more convenient as âtechnologyâ improves
⢠cash â credit instruments â electronic payments
Extrapolating out, technologists predict:
⢠smaller, more âfrictionless transactionsâ
⢠smaller, more targeted (crypto) currencies, application currencies (âtokensâ), personal currencies even
Resulting in peer-to-peer exchanges via âdistributedâ (blockchain) platforms
⢠âEarning is learningâ et al
This is unlikely though, as we forget that money is a technology for exchanging value with someone you donât or
canât trust
Before âmoneyâ we used shared debt
⢠implicit and uncounted, think rounds at the bar last night
⢠small communities exchanging resources: farmer â baker â cobbler
Money did have a role
⢠calculating damages: a unit of account
⢠a way of extracting value from the unwilling: tax â Indian pound et al
Indeed, âtaxâ is moneyâs âkiller appâ
Exchanging value via money implied not trusting your counter party
⢠hence âdirty moneyâ and âfilthy richâ
⢠hHence the prohibitions on lending in all Abrahamic religions
This cultural aversion persists to this day
⢠Skip
Surveys commonly find we want
⢠fewer transactions, not more
⢠a happy retirement, not financial products
⢠a home, not a mortgage
⢠etc
⌠not more, finer-grained payments
So what pulled us into the monetary system?
4. 4
Un Galerie du Rayon de Modes, Le Bon MarchĂŠ, Paris, 1920. HĂŠliographie de N. D. Phot. Public domain.
We forget that retail is a constructed environment
⢠the result of shifting from bespoke to mass market products
⢠⌠from communities to commerce
⢠⌠from buying from someone we know, to someone we donât
We went from mentioning to our friend, the cobbler, that our shoes were wearing thing to
⢠Need-want recognition
⢠Search
⢠Comparison & product selection
⢠Exchange of goods: payment at the point of sale
⢠(post-purchase regret)
Over the last 100 years or so, what we think of the modern retail experience evolved
⢠Goods on display
⢠Prices clearly visible (no negotiation)
⢠Amenities (to attract the punters)
⌠all finally coming together in Le Bon Marche in the late 1800s early 1900s (pictured)
5. 5John Lewis store in Westfield Stratford City Shopping Centre, 2012. Source: Editor5807
John Lewis store in Westfield Stratford City Shopping Centre, 2012. Source: Editor5807 <https://
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/
File:Stratford_City_Westfield_Shopping_Centre_John_Lewis_London_2012_Olympics_merchandise_2.JPG>
Moving forward to todayâŚ
Technology has made retail more efficient:
⢠PoS systems (invented in the 70s by MacDonalds)
⢠Plan-o-grams
⢠category management
⢠dynamic pricing
⢠âŚ
Online simply copies the offline paradigm
⢠catalogues
⢠shopping carts
⢠checkouts
This model has been remarkably resilient, existing unchanged
6. 6
However, this is still the same model as Le bon marchĂŠ
⢠As retail
⢠As online
For all our technical sophistication, little has changed in the fundamental experience
We have forgotten that shopping is:
⢠a constructed environment
⢠a learnt experience
⌠until recently that is:
⢠A confluence of factors has destroyed the mass market
⢠⌠and is redefining the commercial market in the process
First â around 2005 â the consumer internet and express airfreight destroyed the mid market. Why compromise
when you have:
⢠the cheapest
⢠the best (at the best price)
Consumers now have more information than merchants
⢠PacBrands et al
Then social media shifted this source of information:
⢠from what the producersâ published
⢠to group (peer) opinions
What this has done is redefine value at both ends of the market
7. 7
Source: Lisdavid89
On one side we have âhigh valueâ
Relationships that are heavily invested in:
⢠communities
⢠religions
Thereâs a narrative / experience that the customer identifies with, and cost is a minor concern
Examples:
⢠the exclusive music pack or backstage pass
⢠the cobbler who learnt their fatherâs trade
⢠the local butcher selling products from boutique producers
⢠hand crafted furniture from sustainable forests
8. 8
Source: Lisdavid89
On the other we have âconvenienceâ
âGive me convenience or give me deathâ â Dead Kennedys
⢠We donât want to put a lot of effort in
⢠We donât want to make decisions
⢠We donât want to be bored
⢠We want it cheap (though we donât care about it being the âcheapestâ)
Ideally, we want it as a service
Examples:
⢠music streaming: âI just need background music for my lifeâ
⢠$4 thongs at Target: for the holiday
⢠Dollar Shave Club
⢠Flexicar: I need to move something
⢠Aldi: âI just need tomato sauce, donât waste my timeâ
Weâre all arbitraging the difference, and individually weâre doing it different ways
Weâre also becoming more impulse driven at both ends of the the market, rather than searching
⢠chance discovery of a service through our community
This can be seen in how the âpaymentâ is being unbundled
⢠separating clearance and settlement
⢠and moving them away from the till
9. 9
Space: moving from the PoS to somewhere else
Focused on optimising the payment â slicing a few seconds of â weâve forgotten that the bulk of the customerâs
wasted time is in:
⢠going to the PoS
⢠tallying the goods
Weâre seeing a few examples of companies moving the PoS to the customer, rather than the customer to the PoS
⢠Aisle buying
HiPay -> image
⢠purchase via the customerâs phone and WeChat account
⢠cash transmitted from to merchantâs account
⢠Note that itâs common in China to leave home with only your phone and WeChat account
Apple Store App
⢠purchase in-store via customerâs phone & iTunes account
⢠aggregates purchases
Amazon Go
Moving this online is just a question of risk model
10. Source: HAO XING
Time: forward in time
Starbucks moved their loyalty scheme to a stored-value card
⢠Customers add value to the cart
⢠Use the card for purchases
Advantages:
⢠Ties loyalty accumulation to purchase (one card, not two)
⢠Creates a sunk cost: the customer has already purchased the coffee
Disadvantages:
⢠Need to preload the card, making some transactions more complicated
⢠Still tied to the PoS
11. 11
Time: back in time
Skip: skip the queue
⢠Use the app to pre-order
⢠Pickup-and-go
⢠Pay every fortnight (not using the PoS)
Advantages
⢠Skipping the queue (some people)
⢠Avoiding âtransactingâ (many people)
We forget our cultural prohibitions against handling money
⢠We donât like having the transaction in the middle of the relationship
⢠We prefer services where they payment happens âsomewhere/somewhen elseâ
⢠Uber is an example
12. 12
Next, these new models are not like the old models
we think of the future of our businesses as being the same, but online
⢠online retail
⢠online âŚ
For example, consider grocery shopping
⢠itâs looking increasingly unlikely that grocery shopping will move âonlineâ
⢠itâs not a question of someone getting the model right
⢠doing so assumes that the current model is working fine, but we need to upgrade execution
This ignores the fact that consumer behaviour is changing
And we forget that our concept of âsupermarketâ is based on the old location-based retail paradigm that is dying
13. 13
SubscriptionsHigh Value Convenience
Three text boxes
Itâs looking more likely that the grocery market will fragment
breaking into three
⢠High value, multi dimensional value
⢠subscriptions: low cost, low hassle, donât force me to make decisions
⢠ad hoc (Aldi, on demand delivery) for the corner cases
the old buying cycle is breaking down
⢠the foundation of business
Business has been built around
⢠Need
⢠Search
⢠Transaction
however, increasingly we no longer search
weâre building relationships with high-value merchants
weâre converting purchases to subscriptions for the things we just need
whatâs left over â low-cost things we need occasionally â weâre after convenience
You need to create a new relationship with the customer
⢠one not based on search or cost
There appears to be three on offer
religion: you form part of the customerâs identity, Apple, the local butcher
⢠You have the primary relationship with the customer, not someone elseâs product or brand
⢠value is multi-dimensional
⢠value is absolute â itâs your product or someone elses
⢠you donât care where the customer buys, as long as they buy your product
community: you facilitate the community that the consumer is part of
⢠you and the client are in the same community
⢠value is multi-dimensional
⢠value is relative â to the community
⢠you donât care what the client buys, as long as they buy it from you
commodity: cheap, old skool
⢠you need to be convenient to the customer when they want something
⢠you need to be (reliably) cheap â ideally you want to be a habit
⢠donât force unnecessary decisions â and donât bore the customer
We note that thereâs good money to be made in all three models
⢠Apple earns the majority of smart phone profits, with a minority position in the market
⢠A community provides you with multiple income streams
⢠The most profitable restaurants are the cheapest
14. Mobile payment terminal, in Fornebu, Norway. Source: HLundgaard.
The existing trust model â need, search, cash at the point of sale â will probably endure for quite some time.
However, simply moving the current paradigm to the digital world runs counter to consumer preferences.
⢠Consumers donât seem to want e-wallets, no matter how many times we present them. Even Apple Pay is having
trouble driving adoption, and is willing to pay $5 per user.
⢠Despite optimising the payment (or hiding it with âgift wrappingâ) we canât ignore the fact that, in a world where
consumers âknowâ the firms they deal with, that consumers donât want the payment in the middle of the
relationship.
⢠We forget that the payment â cash â was a solution when customer and merchant didnât know, or couldnât trust,
each other, and that is no longer generally true.
So if the old trust architecture is on the wain, then what is the new trust architecture?
15. 15
Blockchainâ¨
(database)
Money
(payments)
Identity
(accounts)
Reputation
(ratings)
Marketplace
(catalogue)
At this point many people will be creating for blockchain
⢠it decentralises / democratises trust, or so weâre told
⢠âtrust in the mathâ rather than trust in the people
Through the magic can build Dapps that are more transparent and equitable
There are a few issues with this
Dapps will never be economic
⢠distributed solutions are always less efficient than centralised ones
⢠they will also be less performant, for the same reasons
⢠these solutions improve sublinearly at best
we can have the technical argument at the bar if you like
Value is created in the real world
⢠Bitcoin only has value when you exchange it for something you want in the real world
⢠touching the real world requires oracles & oracles have all the failings of real world services
consequently
⢠tokenising an asset doest change the nature of the asset: digital land titles are just land titles
⢠regulation still applies
⢠nothing is anonymous
Dapps donât democratise trust
⢠trust is a subjective estimate of how other actorsâ future actions will meet your expectations
⢠Trust is different to technology. We canât democratise trust. Trust is a subjective measure of risk. Itâs something
we construct internally when we observe a consistent pattern of behaviour. We canât create new kinds of trust.
Trust is not a fungible factor that we can manipulate and transfer.
⢠nor
⢠If we want to rebuild trust then we need to solve the hard social problems, and create the stable, consistent and
transparent institutions (be they distributed or centralised) that all of us can trust.
neither bitcoin nor Eth are examples of institutions that the majority of the population can trust
16. 16
Commonwealth Bank of Australia ten-shilling note (1954-60) circa 1954, pre-1960 (note), 2015 (image). Source:
Image by Godot13.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:AUS-29-Commonwealth_Bank_of_Australia-10_Shillings_(1954-60).jpg
Most problematic though, is the idea of introducing âtokensâ to fund many services
⢠or even the creation of âpersonalâ currencies
For example:
⢠Filecoin: p2p file sharing funded by a token
⢠p2p payments: p2p payments funded via a token
Itâs assumed that these currencies can be âpeggedâ to something like AUD to avoid exchange problems
⢠this is foolish and misunderstands how money functions
If you peg, then you need to defend the peg
⢠youâll need deep pockets
⢠unless you control all the exchanges (impossible)
⢠or you could create a private currency
⢠but then you need to fund it (or recreate fractional banking)
Even then you need to deal with exchange rates:
⢠you want to pay me in a p2p currency for your share of the pizza
⢠but Iâm not a user of the currency, and Iâll need to go to the bother of creating an account and converting it into a
currency I do use
⢠so I value the p2p currency less that you do, and will demand more to compensate for the bother
this is the same as using AUD somewhere itâs uncommon like South America
⢠if a merchant accepts it (which most wonât) theyâll demand a higher rate to compensate for the inconvenience
All these additional currencies â and consequent exchange rates and required services â is a drag on the
economy
⢠we seem to forget that using currency comes at a cost
technology canât solve these problems
⢠even for personal currencies
the solution is to minimise the number of currencies in use
⢠this is why we put an end to freelancing by nationalising currencies
⢠hence: tax is a currencyâs killer app
17. 17
So let us admit: distribution is not a magic bullet
More to the point: there is no new technology in blockchain
What weâre seeing is a social change
Weâre back at Kranzbergâs 4th law
So if blockchain (technology) wonât shape our future trust relationships, then what will?
18. Well, in the short to mid term, thereâs probably three, rather than one, based on the emerging trust relationships.
19. Social groups (platforms)
First, we might burry the payment in the social platform that consumers use to interact with the merchants, with
settlement via a low-cost mechanism (BPay? NPP?). In many â all? â cases the act of ordering will trigger the
payment, as with Uber. Our social platform(s) of choice become our remote controls for the world.
Trust â for both customer and merchant â has moved from currency to platform (though we still use a currency
as a unit of value).
Payments are moving away from the point of sale, to happen seamlessly in the background.
⢠âBuy it nowâ buttons on Pinterest.
⢠Ordering products or services via a social platform: WeChat â Skip, Uber etc.
Even using the platform as a substitute for cash or a traditional payment
It will be interesting to see if Facebook, Twitter can make the leap.
20. Social groups (platforms) Payment for a service
Second, payments for products are being converted into subscriptions for services, with periodic settlement via a
low cost settlement mechanism (BPay? NPP?)
This is simply a streamlining of the existing utility model.
Payments are moving away from the till to be seamlessly executed at the point where the product is consumed.
⢠Music streaming
⢠Dollar shave club
⌠and so on
21. Social groups (platforms) A shared store of valuePayment for a service
Third, where customer and merchant have a less transactional relationship, payments may be via an evolved
loyalty scheme, a shared store of value, with any settlement via a low-cost mechanism (BPay? NPP?)
⢠Value is now multidimensional, rather than solely focused on transactions.
⢠Customer and merchant know each other.
⢠Both want the payment moved to the edge of the relationship.
A shared store of value â commitment by mutual debt â just like before the Industrial Revolution
⢠Merchant rewards customer for prosocial behaviour, not just transactions
⢠Customer commits âfundsâ to create a sunk cost and show commitment
Acts like a complimentary currency, which means that the banks might be best positioned to offer white-label
services.
22. 22
Pipe vs platform
Market Firm
1924 Model T assembly lineEdward Lloyd's Coffee house, Ă Londres, par William Holland (1789)
The rational behind Dapps is that theyâre the logical extension of the old tension between firms and marketsâ¨
Coase told us that the choice between firm and market is driven by the cost of: discovery, coordination &
contacting
Firms:
⢠The old value chain â stuff goes from left to right
⢠Producers find materials, create value, and deliver to customers
⢠Miserly with communication/coordination as everything is predefined and mandated from above
Markets
⢠Platform businesses -> the hot thing at the moment Producers and consumers gather in a marketâ¨
More choice, but requires more communication
⢠Uni Cal saved something like 50$ million moving their procurement process to a market
Weâre seeing the âgreat unbundlingâ
Dapps are positioned as the next step
⢠make everything âdistributedâ
23. 23
Village fair, Richard Brakenburgh, 1650-1700, oil on canvas - Villa Vauban - Luxembourg City
we forget that before the firm and the market we had the village
⢠the baker brought the bread in the morning
⢠the cobbler lived around the corner
⢠etc
we didnât need money as we didnât need (as much) formal governance
⢠vast majority of relationships facilitated via debt
⢠double coincidence of wants is fiction
⢠money only used when we didnât know or didnât trust someone, as with damages
it was industrialisation and the explosion of the mass market that pulled the vast majority of people into the
monetary system
24. 24
MarketCommunity Firm
so we need to consider these on a continuum
communities were great, but they didnât scale
markets enable us to create communities around topics, but we need to go looking for them
firmâs are efficient, but you can have any colour you want as long as itâs black
the amount of administration and formalisation required increases as we move right
the volume of communication required decreases as we move right
value becomes more narrowly defined as we move right
most of industrial history has been a shift from local markets to global firms
more recently weâve seen the shift from global firms to (global) markets, right-to-left
⢠as communication technology has caught up
itâs like weâve shifted right, and then bounced off the end, and now weâre heading back the other way
the consumer shifts weâre seeing
⢠value is multidimensional and relative
⢠direct relationships rather than brands
⢠etc
suggest that weâd like to return to the village
the interesting question is what the âdigital villageâ might look like
25. 25
The future of exchanging value
Uncovering new ways of spending
Bitcoin, Blockchain
& distributed ledgers:
Caught between
promise and reality
26. This publication contains general information only, and none of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu
Limited, its member firms, or their related entities (collectively the âDeloitte Networkâ) is, by
means of this publication, rendering professional advice or services.
Before making any decision or taking any action that may affect your finances or your
business, you should consult a qualified professional adviser. No entity in the Deloitte Network
shall be responsible for any loss whatsoever sustained by any person who relies on this
publication.
Š 2017 Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu.
Peter Evans-Greenwood
Fellow, Deloitte Centre for the Edge