*BITCOIN*

*FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF ECONOMICS AND ISLAMIC LAW*

*http://www.raqaba.co.uk/?q=en/node/1768
<http://www.raqaba.co.uk/?q=en/node/1768>*



1.       At present, specialists are hamstrung from offering a Shari’a
opinion on the production of Bitcoin by the sheer abundance of questions
around this electronic currency combined with the lack of conceptual
clarity around the product. In some respects the haze that surrounds the
issue arises out of insufficiency of the information available. What has
been stated to date has been inadequate, and has been of a rather
exploratory and conceptualizing character. The present paper would perhaps
initiate a hitherto unprecedented stage in which new steps are taken in
dealing with this exigency in terms of Islamic law.

2.       I will attempt here to provide a seminal foundation for academic
dialogue on the issue with due emphasis upon the nature of the problem as a
contemporary exigency. It exhibits a great degree of similarity to
fiduciary paper money unbacked by gold and silver whose status as money
stems from confidence reposed in its issuer, who is the sovereign authority
of every country, and whose value changes in relation to a country’s trade
balance, i.e. its exports and imports in the first instance, followed by
investments and speculations in the currency markets as the chief factor
influencing the stability or unsteadiness of a currency vis-a-vis other
currencies.

3.       The available information brings into relief three aspects to
Bitcoin: (1) production; (2) dealing and trading in Bitcoin; and (3)
entering the Bitcoin network as an investor. I will presently deal with the
first and second aspects only, leaving aside the third on account of the
fact that it lacks universality as compared to aspects 1 and 2, and in
consideration of it holding greater relation to the mechanics of network
marketing against which many a fatwa has warned.

4.       *Production of the digital currency Bitcoin:* It is important at
the outset to differentiate between Bitcoin as a digital currency on the
one hand, and the possibility of converting any real currency to a digital
or electronic currency. I will initially comment upon this latter aspect
and later return to the first as it is the actual issue under discussion.

*Converting any currency into digital currency: *It is possible to convert,
or *encrypt*, real currency into digital or electronic currency in pursuit
of a faster and safer means to exchange and trade in currencies, and
perhaps even money laundering. This is because digital currency steps over
the obstacles which state oversight imposes on currencies.

5.       Purpose and intent notwithstanding, this much produces nothing new
in terms of the Islamic legal position. The mere reference to a currency in
an alternative format does nothing to alter the reality of it being, for
example, dollars or pounds sterling, even when expressed as an equivalent
value under a new descriptor, eg. *$100 = 1 unit of digital currency X*.

6.        As long as it remains possible to revert to the original currency
through *decryption*, matters will remain reasonable, acceptable and free
from substantive change. In the use of currency cards, bank transfers or
prepaid banks cards we actually find something that correlates to it in
form, with one important distinction, which is that these mediums operate
on units of the original currency itself while Bitcoin utilizes a new
equivalent value and a new unit descriptor. This would then bring us to the
situation where a real currency has been converted into Bitcoin via
exchange, which is what I will presently discuss.

7.       *Bitcoin as digital currency:* There are, as stated in the
introduction, two aspects with which I will deal: *firstly*, production of
this currency; and *secondly*, dealing with it and its acceptability as
currency. To me, the second aspect appears to be much easier that the
first. I will begin with the first.

8.       *Production of the digital currency Bitcoin: *What is meant by
production here is the issuance of currency, comparable to the minting of
currency as in when a sovereign power prints dollars etc. With Bitcoin,
however, there is no sovereign issuing authority. What we do have,
according to the available information, is that anyone can issue Bitcoin
currency through the process referred to as *mining* on specific internet
sites. This is done via the use of an electronic program that requires a
high powered computer. The computer process culminates in the production of
a specific number of units of the digital currency Bitcoin. Accordingly,
anyone can use the program and issue Bitcoin currency with which to credit
his own internet based account.

9.       This method of production forms a substantive point of divergence
between sovereign issued currency, and Bitcoin. The latter is not issued by
an authority who defines and guarantees it. This particular aspect of
Bitcoin is wrapped in obscurity. Some of the information available would
appear to point at the possibility that this currency could even
electronically evaporate from a user’s internet account. The absence of a
guaranteeing authority would mean that in instances of such evaporation
there would be no one from whom compensation could be demanded.

10.   It may be argued that commercial banks *as private entities* issue
credit money many times in excess of the amount of actual currency
originally deposited with them, and they do this by granting finance to an
extent much higher than the deposits they hold. However, the difference
between Bitcoin and money issued by commercial banks (in a process spoken
of as *the creation of money*) is that issuance by banks is backed by the
guarantee of original deposits as well as by oversight of the sovereign
authority. None of these two factors features in Bitcoin.

I now continue on to the second aspect, leaving for later the Islamic legal
position on issuance, since complete conceptualization and an economic view
would greatly facilitate the formulation of a position in Islamic law.

11.   *Dealing in Bitcoin as a currency in competition with real
currencies:* To date the issuance of Bitcoin has been riddled by the
obscurity that surrounds its guaranteeing authority and the sovereign
authority which generates confidence in it. The real purpose of Bitcoin is
to compete with other currencies in the purchase of goods and services, or
even speculating in currency. Bitcoin has in fact emerged as an accepted
currency in thousands of stores around the world, and has become accepted
as a currency parallel to other currencies to the extent where it has
become exchangeable with the dollar and the euro at prices accepted in Wall
Street like any other currency.

12.   The emergence of Bitcoin currency from its issuer (or producer) to
the restaurant owner or the owners of dollars or pounds raises Bitcoin from
the obscurity and haze that surrounds the stage of its production, to a
stage where a general norm comes to form around Bitcoin as an accepted
means for settling obligations, a means of commercial exchange, or a store
of value or wealth. These are the salient features of any currency. At this
point, if we were to close our eyes to the nebulousness of production, we
find ourselves before a new currency comparable to other currencies in
their essential features whilst exceeding them in ease and safety—but also
exhibiting the risk factors of which we spoke earlier.

13.   *The Islamic legal view on issuance: *It is noted that Bitcoin
differs from the fundamental concept for the issuance of any currency in
that its issuing authority is unknown, that it is acquired without
recompense, and that its producers gain access to great advantages by
exchanging these numbers for goods and other currencies. Through the
advantages of issuing currency they are able to generate enormous wealth at
the expense of society as represented in its sovereign authority. This is
one of the important axial points of consideration in the formulation of an
Islamic legal position in the issuance of Bitcoin. The issuance stage,
however, will soon recede into a non-existent historical stage while the
currency itself remains as available and accessible as any other. The
questions will remain: Who is the issuer? And by what right did the issuer
achieve those massive returns on issuance? Is it an undisclosed global
government with governmental authority to issue? This assumption might well
be the key to facilitating an Islamic legal position, thereby bypassing the
issuance stage. As the currency increases in circulation, discussion around
the issuance stage will disappear because the currency would then become,
as mentioned, a reality before the eyes and ears of the world.

14.   *The Islamic legal view of the post-issuance stage (circulation,
settlement and saving): *A general norm has begun forming around the
acceptability of this currency in all markets in full view of legislators.
There are even places for the exchange of Bitcoin against other currencies.
This will reinforce a view of Bitcoin as fully comparable to other
currencies in currency-for-currency contracts, and in usury through the
enforcement of equivalence in case of single-specie contracts, and the
taking of constructive delivery bilaterally where more than one specie is
involved as in the case of dollars-for-Bitcoin, as well as the prohibition
on lending at interest.

15.   Support for the notion of a general norm might be drawn here from a
point Imam Malik mentions: if people were to agree on camel skin leather as
money, the rules of usury would apply to it. The reality, however, is
somewhat different. Money issued from camel skin leather is on par with
gold and silver since all of these are recognized as goods in their own
right, which is quite different from paper money which are not goods on
their own but only paper. Bitcoin, similarly, is only numbers. It is for
this reason that I have hinted at the problems inherent in its issuance.
Had Bitcoin been a form of goods in its own right it could have been said
to be similar to gold, silver or camel leather. Being as it is a mere
number, it bears greater resemblance to contemporary paper money which is
nothing but paper. Nevertheless, Bitcoin differs from paper money in that
the latter receives from sovereign decree a confidence which it will lose
in full only through another sovereign decree of discontinuation, while
confidence in Bitcoin grows gradually, without any sovereign decree, but
only by its actual existence.

16.    The above is not a legal ruling. It is a window to boost academic
legal study of this important exigency. The length to which it went was
necessary. I preferred not to divide it into two papers in order to keep
the subject in one place from the first aspect, thereby allowing
researchers and specialists to develop upon it.

*Dr AbdulBari Mashal*

*12/5/2017 *

*Translated from Arabic by: Dr. Mohamad Taha Karaan*


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