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Bitcoin and the bailout

•Discuss view that deposit levy announcement in Cyprus prompted some to consider using the cryptocurrency bitcoin.•Collect rank data for all fifteen bitcoin apps available at the time.•Estimate an index of downloads for each country considered.•Find that downloads generally increased following bailo...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Quarterly review of economics and finance 2017-11, Vol.66, p.50-56
Main Authors: Luther, William J., Salter, Alexander W.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Discuss view that deposit levy announcement in Cyprus prompted some to consider using the cryptocurrency bitcoin.•Collect rank data for all fifteen bitcoin apps available at the time.•Estimate an index of downloads for each country considered.•Find that downloads generally increased following bailout announcement.•Find that effect not especially pronounced in countries thought to have had troubled banking systems. On March 16, 2013, Cyprus announced that it would accept a bailout that required imposing a one-time levy on bank deposits. It has been argued that, by making traditional deposit accounts seem less secure, the bailout announcement prompted some to consider—or reconsider—using the cryptocurrency bitcoin. Relying on rank data for a subset of apps, existing studies maintain that interest in bitcoin increased following the announcement, especially in countries with troubled banks. We argue that (1) focusing on a subset of apps does not allow one to distinguish a general increase in the demand for bitcoin apps from a substitution between bitcoin apps and (2) changes in rank data are a poor predictor of changes in the number of downloads. In order to address these concerns, we collect rank data for all fifteen bitcoin apps available at the time and use an established technique to estimate an index of downloads for each country considered. We find that, while downloads of bitcoin apps increased following the announcement, the observed effect was not especially pronounced in countries thought to have had troubled banking systems at the time.
ISSN:1062-9769
1878-4259
DOI:10.1016/j.qref.2017.01.009