The government decides what constitutes money, via legal tender laws.
The government issues bonds/treasuries, which act as the backbone of the monetary system.
A state agency called the central bank creates money and/or sets the rules for money creation.
Central banks grant special privileges in the form of licenses to commercial banks that can then partake in the money creation process.
The central bank manages the interest rates.
If problems emerge, the central bank changes the rules of the game and introduces new policies, such as quantitative easing, to prevent the system from collapsing.
For some strange reason, modern financial systems are often understood as a product of the free market. But if any other industry was managed this way, we would have no problem identifying it as a prime example of central planning.
What are the consequences of fiat money? Since money constitutes 50% of every single transaction, its quality affects the economy in all aspects:
Money creation is the source of the Cantillon effect : Those who are closest to the money spigots get richer (government, financial industry, wealthy investors, creditors), while those farthest from it get poorer (wage earners, savers).
The constant push to lower the interest below the natural market rate drives an increasing indebtedness of all economic sectors (government, companies, households): At the beginning of 2021, global debt was $281 trillion or 355% of world GDP — a steep rise from $67 trillion, or 198% of world GDP in the year 2000.
The combined overall effect is that mankind is wasting a tremendous amount of resources. Millions of people are thus unnecessarily kept in poverty or prevented from fulfilling their full potential.
The evil of fiat money is especially devious because of how unseen it is. It seems to work fine on the surface as the negative effects are all indirect and to understand their cause, one needs to carefully study economics and history. This, in turn, leads many to blame the devastating effects of fiat money on the free market, with an inevitable conclusion that it is more central planning that we need, not less.
Fix the money, fix the world is a very fitting slogan that captures the essence of the problem.
Before bitcoin, there wasn’t much hope for fixing money. Those who understood the problem of fiat money couldn’t offer a satisfying alternative. Some believed that we should return to the gold standard — but this begged the nagging question of its practicality. A return to the gold standard would have to be orchestrated by the government; the very same institution that greatly profits from the existence of fiat money. The pre-bitcoin era was thus very depressing for the free-market monetary economists.
Bitcoin is a much more pragmatic alternative to fiat money than gold could ever be. Gold requires trusted third parties such as banks and trusted monetary instruments such as checking accounts and banknotes, if it were to function as money in the modern economy. Bitcoin, on the other hand, comes with worldwide transaction capabilities that rely on cryptographic assurances rather than trust.
Don’t underestimate how early we still are in the race between bitcoin and all the world’s fiat currencies. Most people are still skeptical or completely ignorant about the prospects of bitcoin fixing the problem of fiat money. Starting to save in bitcoin now and protecting your legacy via hardware wallet use is one of the most impactful decisions you can make in your life.
You are not too late for bitcoin.
Be Optimistic
Many people have a pessimistic outlook, considering the events of the past 18 months. But when in doubt, zoom out. We are living in a very optimistic era. The idea of central planning in the field of production and distribution of goods has been discredited long ago. Most of the greatest problems of history are all but solved. And we have the solution at hand for the persistent meta problem of fiat money.
Compared to the hopeless situation of someone born 100 years ago, we have it so much better now. The sad fellow from the beginning of the article had very limited information about what is going on in the world and almost no hope of escaping the consequences of the centrally planned economy. His one chance at a better life was to physically escape — an option with high personal risks and very uncertain outcomes.
Today, we have an option to opt out of monetary central planning no matter where we live. We can literally take money into our own hands, while relying on no one and preserving our privacy.
And that is a reason to be optimistic.
This is a guest post by Josef Tětek. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC, Inc. or Bitcoin Magazine.