Only Bitcoin and Gold Can Stop Governments from Destroying the Currency
"Bitcoin and gold are now playing the essential role that independent central banks should be enforcing."
By Daniel Lacalle, Mises Institute
Allow me to remind you of a few uncomfortable truths.
Government spending is out of control in developed nations. Furthermore, no interventionist government wants to cut spending or balance the budget. Government spending empowers politicians, and reducing it means losing the grip on the economy.
Interventionist governments aren’t concerned about debts, deficits, or inflation. Inflation is a deliberate policy, and interventionist governments seek to nationalize the economy while imposing total control over productive sectors by issuing continuously devalued currencies.
Government spending is printing money. Politicians are happy to promise more free stuff by endlessly spending because they know they won’t pay for it and that it will make citizens and businesses more dependent and submissive to political power. No government can truly reduce debt without cutting spending.
Inflation is evidence of the loss of solvency for the issuer of money. It is a de facto slow default. Inflation serves as a policy that justifies and perpetuates significant government imbalances, shifting the financial burden onto real wages and deposit savings.
The fallacy of balancing the budget through higher taxes leads to economic stagnation and more debt. High taxes are not a tool to reduce debt but to justify high indebtedness. Tax receipts are cyclical whereas government expenditures are consolidated and annualized.
No interventionist government is going to willingly act to reduce debt and spending because they can always tax more and blame others for their problems. Furthermore, central banks have stopped playing the essential role of curbing fiscal excess to become enablers of rising fiscal imbalances.
Central banks play a crucial role in the fiat world due to the intertwining of monetary and fiscal policy. The system will gradually collapse if central banks do not stop the growth of government fiscal imbalances.
However, the independence of central banks is diminishing daily, and their policies tend to conceal excessive government spending and debt. Meanwhile, governments ignore the fact that they have surpassed the three limits of government debt: economic, fiscal, and inflationary. More government debt means lower growth, more taxes generate weaker receipts, and more government spending perpetuates inflation.
Now that central banks have stopped being the essential limit to government excess, there are only two alternatives: gold and Bitcoin.
Gold has already overtaken the euro as the second largest asset after the US dollar in global central banks. In a few months, it will be the largest asset. Global central banks have lost confidence in sovereign debt from developed countries as a reserve asset. Thus, developed nations’ long-term bond yields rise above inflation rate expectations.
Bitcoin, on the other hand, has shown investors and citizens that a decentralized currency can gradually become a low-volatility reserve asset, a generalized means of payment, and a unit of measurement. As global citizens see Bitcoin as an increasingly viable alternative to fiat money, more are using it to store value and protect themselves against inflation.
Investors do not trust developed economies to maintain their solvency. Gold and Bitcoin are now playing the role that central banks have abandoned: reminding governments that they cannot spend and print currency forever. Bitcoin may be a teenager and more volatile, but the powerful message to the world is clear: the years of uncontrolled government spending and printing are over.
Obviously, governments do not like this. And central banks that have stopped being as independent as they should be, like the ECB, are looking to eliminate the risk of independent currencies taking away the monopoly of money by issuing a legally imposed central bank digital currency (CBDC). Interestingly, the U.S. administration is doing the opposite, banning CBDCs and embracing crypto as the next monetary revolution.
The ECB is admitting the euro’s enormous loss of utilization in global transactions and panicking by issuing a surveillance tool disguised as money, the CBDC. The US administration wants to cement the dollar’s reserve status by attracting global investment in crypto.
Bitcoin and gold are now playing the essential role that independent central banks should be enforcing. Central banks are unnecessarily dovish and continue to disguise bloated government imbalances. Gold and Bitcoin are essential parts of the answer to the inflationary temptations of governments. The only things that will save us from government excesses are decentralization and independent money.
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You can't really argue with that, though I am never going to be in the Bitcon camp.
It wasn't too long ago that I would have told you there was nothing positive about having the Federal Reserve as our central bank. I curse the day they were created and used to subvert our Constitutional rights and became the biggest tool of wealth transfer into the hands of a few in the history of humanity.
But today I find myself glad they are there. When I look at the Congress and President(s) of the last 25 years, I can only imagine where we would be today had there not been some, dare I say, restraint on the monetary policy. I am not cutting the Fed any slack for their role, but our politicians have been more than willing to borrow and spend like irresponsible, drunken sailors.
Here we are at what I believe to be the "end" of what is left of the American Empire by dollar supremacy, and these politicians are falling all over each other in a race to borrow and spend even more. The uni-party doesn't disagree on the amount of pork, they only disagree on who gets the pork.
And here we are.....with the Federal Reserve holding out on lowering rates, making the borrowing and spending just a little more difficult......showing the only restraint. Who'd a thunk it?
Great article.
However, bitcoin as an investment vehicle reminds me of the Dutch tulip craze of the 1700s.