Bitcoin Magazine Books
The Satoshi Papers Explores The Role Of The State In A Post-Bitcoin World: An Interview With Natalie Smolenski
Published
7 hours agoon
By
adminNatalie Smolenski has made a name for herself in the Bitcoin space in recent years by sharing her dynamic insights on Bitcoin and how it shapes the world moving forward.
The PhD-holding anthropologist is on the verge of upping the ante around her Bitcoin-related thought contributions with the new book she’s edited and to which she’s contributed, The Satoshi Papers: Reflections On Political Economy After Bitcoin (published by the Bitcoin Policy Institute‘s imprint of Bitcoin Magazine Books and available for pre-order now).
The book is a collection of texts from some of the most prominent academics who write about Bitcoin, including Andrew M. Bailey, Avik Roy and Leopoldo Bebchuk. With pieces entitled “Easy Money, Easy Wars? The Evolution of War Finance, Forever Wars, and the Prospects of a Bitcoin Peace” and “Dispute Resolution Without the State,” Smolenski and her colleagues explore the potential shifts in politics and power that may occur as a result of Bitcoin’s existence and proliferation.
I sat down with Smolenski to discuss why she chose to publish The Satoshi Papers at this moment in time, who she hopes to reach via the book and why the book isn’t an “apology” for Bitcoin.
What was the impetus to put The Satoshi Papers together?
Back in 2020, a friend of mine, Lee Bratcher, with whom I co-founded the Texas Blockchain Council and set up the Texas Blockchain Summit, suggested that the time may be right to publish some essays about this moment in the historical adoption of Bitcoin — that this was a refounding moment for the American Republic.
So, there seemed to be an opportunity to collect works from interdisciplinary voices to talk about and investigate what the relationship between the individual, society and the state looks like in a post-Bitcoin world.
I took that as a kind of mission and I founded the Texas Bitcoin Foundation, which is a 501(c)(3), an education-focused charity. I took a step back from the policy space in order to focus more on some of the theoretical and scientific issues that I think need to inform the policy conversation going forward.
How did you decide on the roster of contributors for the book?
There were some people we invited personally, because I knew them, and I knew that they were strong thinkers in the Bitcoin space. A number of them came back and said, “Yes, we’d love to contribute an essay.”
So, we had some personal invitations go out and then we also had an open call for papers and those went through a couple of rounds. Initially, people just submitted an abstract, and we gave the most promising abstracts feedback if we thought they could potentially be a fit for the paper.
We got initial drafts from some of those. Then, we had a second round of edits based on the strength of the scholarly argument.
Can you explain what political economy is?
Political economy is actually an old term. Back before political science and economics functioned as separate fields, there was this domain of political economy, which studied how states and societies generated wealth, like Adam Smith did in The Wealth of Nations.
Many of the people that we think of today as economists would have called themselves political economists back then because they recognized that markets are shaped in large part by the ways that human societies organize themselves politically. This is not the same thing as saying the market is downstream from the state. Some have made that argument recently, but it’s actually much more nuanced than that.
There’s been a kind of return or resurgence of interest in political economy in recent years, in part as a response to the perceived inadequacy of theoretical frameworks in traditional or mainstream economics today to understand the nuances of markets without taking into account the domain of the political.
How will political economy change now that Bitcoin exists?
Well, that’s a huge question, and that’s what the essays in this volume approach from different angles.
The issuance and maintenance of money is one of many functions of the state — legitimately or illegitimately — depending on your theory of the state.
There’s a way in which Bitcoin has automated one of the functions of the nation state. That said, what it doesn’t do is create a centrally managed token that functions as the jurisdictional medium of exchange of debt settlement in countries around the world.
So, there’s a way in which Bitcoin exists in tension with the nation state, but doesn’t necessarily undermine it, which is an interesting area to explore.
Bitcoin offers an alternative to government-issued currencies, but the presence of an alternative in and of itself does not mean that government-issued monies will go away. Rather, it forces governments to accept the reality that they do not, in fact, have a monopoly over what their people use as a store of value, unit of account, and medium of exchange.
Much in the same way, the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution reminds the government that it does not have a monopoly on violence. The state must exist in tension with the sovereignty of the individual — which includes the right to transact and the right to bear arms — and that means there are limits to state sovereignty.
What sets this book apart from all other books that have been published on Bitcoin thus far?
There have been very few book-length academic treatments of Bitcoin. The main example that I can think of is Resistance Money, which came out this year.
The Satoshi Papers is different in that, rather than being a consistently-authored volume, it is a compilation of articles by different scholars from different disciplines. It is a collection of different voices from various social sciences about Bitcoin. It’s the only book of its kind that does that.
The other thing that I would say sets The Satoshi Papers apart is that it is not an apology — and I use that term classically — for Bitcoin in any way. Apologia is a justification or an argument in favor. We’re not arguing for Bitcoin. Bitcoin is here. It is a fact. It is a material and social fact.
So, the questions that we are exploring in this paper are: What kind of force does Bitcoin have? What are the significant political and geopolitical trends that are influencing the expression of self sovereignty and shaping how self-sovereign technological architectures come about? What does this tell us about the nature of money as a social phenomenon?
Money, much like language and law, is an emergent social phenomenon that does not require the state. Nevertheless, there are top-down vectors of value issuance management that do impact the ways that money is used in human society. So, in some ways the volumes are exploring that tension between top-down and bottom-up vectors of social organization.
Why has academia not only been reluctant to discuss Bitcoin but seemingly by and large against it?
Unfortunately, academia has been the epicenter of what I think is rightly called a cultural revolution in Anglophone countries and in the West more broadly. I think there has been a drive toward emancipation for historically marginalized groups. That has not only significantly influenced scholarship, but has taken it in directions that increasingly have privileged the role of the state over the role of the individual and civil society in realizing the project of emancipation.
And so there is a widespread suspicion of anything smacking of individualism, which is in effect seen as a cover for exploitation. For this reason, movements like Bitcoin, which are more “anarchist-coded” or “right-coded” — even though I would argue that there’s nothing right wing or left wing about Bitcoin — exist in a highly-politicized tribal environment and are identified with political enemies.
So, this volume was very consciously crafted to intervene in that milieu, in large part by not apologizing for Bitcoin. No, we’re not going to take a demure posture here. Bitcoin’s existence is a material fact that you have to reckon with as social scientists. You may not like it. It may not fit into your model of emancipation, but it is here and it has been brought about exclusively by the volunteer labor of individuals around the world who often quite selflessly sacrifice their time and their life to create this avenue of liberty in a world of intense and intensifying state control.
There is a self-confidence to The Satoshi Papers that comes from being academically rigorous, being able to intervene into the debates in the academy. The authors are familiar with the traditions, familiar with the literatures, able to speak to them, and in no way apologize for what all of these academics eventually will simply pre-suppose as part of the architecture of the world.
Everyone’s going to be using Bitcoin. They may not realize it, but it’s just going to become folded into the fabric of their transacting. So, this is an opportunity for those in the academy who have eyes to see and ears to hear to engage proactively in a dialogue about these issues.
What audience do you have in mind for this book?
Anthropologists, economists, philosophers, historians, economic historians.
At the same time, is this the type of book that someone who reads The Bitcoin Standard might read, as well?
Yes, I think this book has unique crossover appeal. I think it is comprehensible and accessible for the educated lay reader, and it also checks the boxes for a scholarly reader who is looking for things like literature review, engagement with the historical debate, source criticism, etc.
The book’s epilogue, “Peer-To-Peer Is A Human Right”, is the transcript from a speech you gave this past April at the Bitcoin Policy Summit. Why do you feel that this point needs to be made so explicitly, especially to academics?
The majority of the social sciences and humanities today are, let’s say, left-oriented politically for lack of a better term, but what that means has changed. In the early-20th century/late-19th century, even early to the mid-19th century, the political left was strongly influenced by anarchist reform movements, and there was a strong tradition of like anarcho-leftist thought. That pretty much fell away after the Second World War.
It seems that the anarchist tradition of thought as it pertains to Bitcoin exists more in Europe than it does in The States. Have you noticed this?
That may be very true. I’m actually not that familiar with the shape of the academy in Western Europe right now, but I would see that as entirely plausible, particularly since there were quite a few thinkers in the French anthropological tradition in the early 20th century, who were very anarcho-leftist, anarcho-socialist.
There was kind of a triumph of a certain very statist approach to socialism and even communism in the American academy, in the Anglophone academy that has persisted to this day, where there’s, like I was saying earlier, a suspicion of anything smacking of individualism as bourgeois conceit or reinscribing social hierarchies, racial hierarchies, gender hierarchies, blah, blah, blah.
This is just a peculiarity of the historical moment that we’re in, and I suspect as the surveillance and control exercised by the state perhaps turns against some of these folks in the academy, there will be a greater level of awareness as to the value of bottom-up approaches to emancipation.
But right now, it’s hard for a lot of people to imagine. They really see the state as the solution to social inequality and oppression.
Many see the state as the mechanism to redistribute wealth, but don’t see the perniciousness of money printing by the Federal Reserve, which works in conjunction with the state. Why don’t academics talk about the harmful effects of currency debasement?
Well, I think the political imagination of many social scientists has been strongly shaped by imagining capitalism and the capitalist as the primary enemy of humanity.
What they’re looking for is the Leviathan, because they’re looking for something that has the power to crush the Elon Musks of the world, who they just hate and hold responsible for virtually every social ill. There isn’t a lot that is redeemable about that kind of caricatured social vision.
But I think there are people in the academy who even might partake of that prejudice who are rigorous thinkers and they want to be engaged with rigorous arguments from “a different perspective.”
The problem with culture war is that it tends to elicit responses that are just as petty and reductive as the originally-proposed points of view. So, if you come into the world spewing a caricatured points of view, you’re going to tend to attract other caricatured points of views. And then it just becomes this tit for tat and doesn’t get anywhere. Part of the objective of The Satoshi Papers is to enter that conversation orthogonally.
This is not a Republican book. This is not some kind of an apologia, like I was saying, for any political orientation or ideology. It is an intervention in a scientific conversation about the origin and nature of money.
So, if you want to take issue with its claims, you absolutely can. They’re right there. In fact, we welcome disagreement. If our authors are wrong about something, we want to know that, but we’re not going to be fighting ideological wars here.
What do you hope people will take away from The Satoshi Papers?
If there’s only one idea that people take away from it, it’s that your emancipation does not require the state. You do not need to wait for the government.
My God, take control of your life. You can, it is within your power to do so, and here are some examples of ways that people throughout human history have chosen to do so.
We have a couple of papers in the book that speculate on the following: What could credit look like on a bitcoin standard? What are different fiscal scenarios for the United States that future presidential administrations could pursue?
The horizon of political possibility is so much wider than we often imagine from our embattled position as culture warriors in the present day, and that’s what we’re trying to blow open.
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Bitcoin Magazine Books
Then They Fight You: Bitcoin and the United States’ Fiscal Crossroads
Published
4 weeks agoon
November 28, 2024By
adminIntroduction
Scholars dispute whether it was Mahatma Gandhi who first said, “First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.” What cannot be disputed is that advocates of bitcoin have adopted the aphorism as their own.
Bitcoiners commonly prophesize that at some point, bitcoin will replace the US dollar as the world’s predominant store of value.[1] Less frequently discussed is the essential question of exactly how such a transition might take place and what risks may lie along the path, especially if the issuers of fiat currency choose to fight back against challenges to their monetary monopolies.
Will the US government and other Western governments willingly adapt to an emerging bitcoin standard, or will they take restrictive measures to prevent the replacement of fiat currencies? If bitcoin does indeed surpass the dollar as the world’s most widely used medium of exchange, will a transition from the dollar to bitcoin be peaceful and benign, like the evolution from Blockbuster Video to Netflix? Or will it be violent and destructive, as with Weimar Germany and the Great Depression? Or somewhere in between?
These questions are not merely of theoretical interest. If bitcoin is to emerge from the potentially turbulent times ahead, the bitcoin community will need to contemplate exactly how to make it resilient to these future scenarios and how best to bring about the most peaceful and least disruptive transition toward an economy based once again upon sound money.
In particular, we must take into account the vulnerabilities of those whose incomes and wealth are below the rich-nation median—those who, at current and future bitcoin prices, may fail to save enough to protect themselves from the economic challenges to come. “Have fun staying poor,” some Bitcoiners retort to their skeptics on social media. But in a real economic crisis, the poor will not be having fun. The failure of fiat-based fiscal policy will inflict the most harm on those who most depend on government spending for their economic security. In democratic societies, populists across the political spectrum will have powerful incentives to harvest the resentment of the non-bitcoin-owning majority against bitcoin-owning elites.
It is, of course, difficult to predict exactly how the US government will respond to a hypothetical fiscal and monetary collapse decades into the future. But it is possible to broadly group the potential scenarios in ways that are relatively negative, neutral, or positive for society as a whole. In this essay, I describe three such scenarios: A restrictive scenario, in which the US attempts to aggressively curtail economic liberties in an effort to suppress competition between the dollar and bitcoin; a palsied scenario, in which partisan, ideological, and special-interest conflicts paralyze the government and limit its ability to either improve America’s fiscal situation or prevent bitcoin’s rise; and a munificent scenario, in which the US assimilates bitcoin into its monetary system and returns to sound fiscal policy. I base these scenarios on the highly probable emergence of a fiscal and monetary crisis in the United States by 2044.
While these scenarios may also play out in other Western nations, I focus on the US here because the US dollar is today the world’s reserve currency, and the US government’s response to bitcoin is therefore of particular importance.
The Coming Fiscal and Monetary Crisis
We know enough about the fiscal trajectory of the United States to conclude that a major crisis is not merely possible but probable by 2044 if the federal government fails to change course. In 2024, for the first time in modern history, interest on the federal debt exceeded spending on national defense. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO)—the national legislature’s official, nonpartisan fiscal scorekeeper—predicts that by 2044, federal debt held by the public will be approximately $84 trillion, or 139 percent of gross domestic product. This represents an increase from $28 trillion, or 99 percent of GDP, in 2024.[2]
The CBO estimate makes several optimistic assumptions about the country’s fiscal situation in 2044. In its most recent projections, at the time of this publication, CBO assumes that the US economy will grow at a robust 3.6 percent per year in perpetuity, that the US government will still be able to borrow at a favorable 3.6 percent in 2044, and that Congress will not pass any laws to worsen the fiscal picture (as it did, for example, during the COVID-19 pandemic).[3]
The CBO understands that its projections are optimistic. In May 2024, it published an analysis of how several alternative economic scenarios would affect the debt-to-GDP ratio. One, in which interest rates increase annually by a rate of 5 basis points (0.05 percent) higher than the CBO’s baseline, would result in 2044 debt of $93 trillion, or 156 percent of GDP. Another scenario, in which federal tax revenue and spending rates as a share of GDP continue at historical levels (for example, as a result of the continuation of purportedly temporary tax breaks and spending programs), yields a 2044 debt of $118 trillion, or 203 percent of GDP.[4]
But combining multiple factors makes clear how truly dire the future has become. If we take the CBO’s higher interest rate scenario, in which interest rate growth is 5 basis points higher each year, and then layer onto that a gradual reduction in the GDP growth rate, such that nominal GDP growth in 2044 is 2.8 percent instead of 3.6 percent, the 2044 debt reaches $156 trillion, or 288 percent of GDP. By 2054, the debt would reach $441 trillion, or 635 percent of GDP (see figure 1).
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Figure 1. US debt-to-GDP ratio: Alternative scenarios
Credit: Avik Roy, https://public.flourish.studio/visualisation/18398503/.
In this scenario of higher interest rate payments and lower economic growth, in 2044 the US government would pay $6.9 trillion in interest payments, representing nearly half of all federal tax revenue. But just as we cannot assume that economic growth will remain high over the next two decades, we cannot assume that the demand for US government debt will remain steady. At a certain point, the US will run out of other people’s money. Credit Suisse estimates that in 2022 there was $454 trillion of household wealth in the world, defined as the value of financial assets and real estate assets, net of debt.[5] Not all of that wealth is available to lend to the United States. Indeed, the share of US Treasury securities held by foreign and international investors has steadily declined since the 2008 financial crisis.[6] At the same time that demand for Treasuries is proportionally declining, the supply of Treasuries is steadily increasing (see figure 2).[7]
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Figure 2. Ownership of US Treasuries
Credit: Avik Roy, https://public.flourish.studio/visualisation/7641395/.
In an unregulated bond market, this decline in demand paired with an increase in supply should lead to lower bond prices, signifying higher interest rates. The Federal Reserve, however, has intervened in the Treasury market to ensure that interest rates remain lower than they otherwise would. The Fed does this by printing new US dollars out of thin air and using them to buy the Treasury bonds that the broader market declines to purchase.[8] In effect, the Fed has decided that monetary inflation (that is, rapidly increasing the quantity of US dollars in circulation) is a more acceptable outcome than allowing interest rates to rise as the nation’s creditworthiness decreases.
This situation is not sustainable. Economist Paul Winfree, using a methodology developed by researchers at the International Monetary Fund,[9] estimates that “the federal government will begin running out of fiscal space, or its capacity to take on additional debt to deal with adverse events, within the next 15 years”—that is, by 2039. He further notes that “interest rates and potential [GDP] growth are the most important factors” that would affect his projections.[10]
For the purposes of our exercise, let us assume that the US will experience a fiscal and monetary failure by 2044—that is, a major economic crisis featuring a combination of rising interest rates (brought about by the lack of market interest in buying Treasuries) and high consumer price inflation (brought about by rapid monetary inflation). Over this twenty-year period, let us also imagine that bitcoin gradually increases in value, such that the liquidity of bitcoin, measured by its total market capitalization, is competitive with that of US Treasuries. Competitive liquidity is important because it means that large institutions, such as governments and multinational banks, can buy bitcoin at scale without excessively disrupting its price. Based on the behavior of conventional financial markets, I estimate that bitcoin will reach a state of competitive liquidity with Treasuries when its market capitalization equals roughly one-fifth of federal debt held by the public. Based on my $156 trillion estimate of federal debt in 2044, this amounts to approximately $31 trillion of bitcoin market cap, representing a price of $1.5 million per bitcoin—roughly twenty times the peak price of bitcoin reached in the first half of 2024.
This is far from an unrealistic scenario. Bitcoin appreciated by a comparable multiple from August 2017 to April 2021, a period of less than four years.[11] Bitcoin has appreciated by similar multiples on many other occasions previously.[12] And if anything, my projections of the growth of US federal debt are conservative. Let us, then, further imagine that by 2044, bitcoin is a well-understood, mainstream asset. A young man who turned eighteen in 2008 will celebrate his fifty-fourth birthday in 2044. By 2044, more than half of the US population will have coexisted with bitcoin for their entire adult lives. A robust ecosystem of financial products, including lending and borrowing, will by then likely have been well established atop the bitcoin base layer. Finally, let us speculate that in this scenario, inflation has reached 50 percent per annum. (This is somewhere between the over-100 percent inflation rates of Argentina and Turkey in 2023 and the nearly 15 percent inflation experienced by the US in 1980.)
In 2044, under these conditions, the US government will be in crisis. The rapid depreciation in the value of the dollar will have led to a sudden drop in demand for Treasury bonds, and there will not be an obvious way out. If Congress engages in extreme fiscal austerity—for example, by cutting spending on welfare and entitlement programs—its members will likely be thrown out of office. If the Federal Reserve raises interest rates enough to retain investor demand—say, above 30 percent—financial markets will crash, along with the credit-fueled economy, much as they did in 1929. But if the Fed allows inflation to rise even further, it will only accelerate the exit from Treasuries and the US dollar.
Under these circumstances, how might the US government respond? And how might it treat bitcoin? In what follows, I consider three scenarios. First, I contemplate a restrictive scenario, in which the US attempts to use coercive measures to prevent the use of bitcoin as a competitor to the dollar. Second, I discuss a palsied scenario, in which political divisions and economic weakness paralyze the US government, preventing it from taking meaningful steps for or against bitcoin. Finally, I consider a munificent scenario, in which the US eventually ties the value of the dollar to bitcoin, restoring the nation’s fiscal and monetary soundness. (See figure 3.)
Figure 3. Three US fiscal scenarios
1. The Restrictive Scenario
Throughout history, the most common response of government to a weakening currency has been to force its citizens to use and hold that currency instead of sounder alternatives, a phenomenon called financial repression. Governments also commonly deploy other economic restrictions, such as price controls, capital controls, and confiscatory taxation to maintain unsound fiscal and monetary policies.[13] It is possible—even probable—that the United States will respond similarly to the crisis to come.
Price Controls
In AD 301, the Roman Emperor Diocletian issued his Edictum de Pretiis Rerum Venalium—the Edict Concerning the Sale Price of Goods—which sought to address inflation caused by the long-running debasement of the Roman currency, the denarius, over a five-hundred-year period. Diocletian’s edict imposed price caps on over 1,200 goods and services.[14] These included wages, food, clothing, and shipping rates. Diocletian blamed rising prices not on the Roman Empire’s extravagant spending but on “unprincipled and licentious persons [who] think greed has a certain sort of obligation . . . in ripping up the fortunes of all.”[15]
Actions of this sort echo throughout history until the modern day. In 1971, US President Richard Nixon responded to the imminent collapse of US gold reserves by unilaterally destroying the dollar’s peg to one-thirty-fifth of an ounce of gold and by ordering a ninety-day freeze on “all prices and wages throughout the United States.”[16] Nixon, like Diocletian and so many other rulers in between, did not blame his government’s fiscal or monetary policies for his country’s predicament but rather the “international money speculators” who “have been waging an all-out war on the American dollar.”[17]
Even mainstream economists have convincingly shown that price controls on goods and services do not work.[18] This is because producers cease production if they are forced to sell their goods and services at a loss, which leads to shortages. But price controls remain a constant temptation for politicians since many consumers believe that price controls will protect them from inflation (at least in the short term). Since 2008, the Federal Reserve has imposed an increasingly aggressive set of controls on what economic historian James Grant calls “the most important price in capital markets”—that is, the price of money as reflected by interest rates.[19] As explained above, the Federal Reserve can effectively control interest rates on Treasury securities by acting as the dominant buyer and seller of those securities on the open market. (When bond prices rise because of more buying than selling, the interest rates implied by their prices decline, and vice versa.) The interest rates used by financial institutions and consumers, in turn, are heavily influenced by the interest rates on Treasury bonds, bills, and notes. Prior to the 2008 financial crisis, the Fed used this power narrowly, on a subset of short-term Treasury securities. But afterward, under Chairman Ben Bernanke, the Fed became far more aggressive in using its power to control interest rates throughout the economy.[20]
Capital Controls
Price controls are only one tool used by governments to control monetary crises. Another is capital controls, which hamper the exchange of a local currency for another currency or reserve asset.
In 1933, during the Great Depression, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (popularly known as FDR) deployed a First World War–era statute to prohibit Americans from fleeing the dollar for gold. His Executive Order 6102 prohibited Americans from holding gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates and required people to surrender their gold to the US government in exchange for $20.67 per troy ounce.[21] Nine months later, Congress devalued the dollar by changing the price of a troy ounce to $35.00, effectively forcing Americans to accept an immediate 41 percent devaluation of their savings while preventing them from escaping that devaluation by using a superior store of value.[22]
Capital controls are far from a historical relic. Argentina has historically prohibited its citizens from exchanging more than $200 worth of Argentine pesos for dollars per month, ostensibly to slow the decline of the value of the peso.[23] China imposes strict capital controls on its citizens—essentially requiring government approval for any exchange of foreign currency—to prevent capital from leaving China for other jurisdictions.[24]
Increasingly, mainstream economists see these modern examples of capital controls as a success. The International Monetary Fund, born out of the 1944 Bretton Woods Agreement, had long expressed opposition to capital controls, largely at the behest of the United States, which benefits from global use of the US dollar. But in 2022, the International Monetary Fund revised its “institutional view” of capital controls, declaring them an appropriate tool for “managing . . . risks in a way that preserves macroeconomic and financial stability.”[25]
In my restrictive 2044 scenario, the US uses capital controls to prevent Americans from fleeing the dollar for bitcoin. The federal government could achieve this in several ways:
- Announcing a purportedly temporary, but ultimately permanent, suspension of the exchange of dollars for bitcoin and forcing the conversion of all bitcoin assets held in cryptocurrency exchanges into dollars at a fixed exchange rate. (Based on my predicted market price at which bitcoin’s liquidity is competitive with Treasuries, that would be approximately $1.5 million per bitcoin, but there is no guarantee that a forced conversion would occur at market rates.)
- Barring businesses under US jurisdiction from holding bitcoin on their balance sheets and from accepting bitcoin as payment.
- Liquidating bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) by forcing them to convert their holdings to US dollars at a fixed exchange rate.
- Requiring bitcoin custodians to sell their bitcoin to the US government at a fixed exchange rate.
- Requiring those who self-custody their bitcoin to sell it to the government at a fixed exchange rate.
- Introducing a central bank digital currency to fully surveil all US dollar transactions and ensure that none are used to purchase bitcoin.
The US government would be unlikely to execute all of these strategies successfully. In particular, the US will be unable to force all those who self-custody bitcoin to surrender their private keys. But many law-abiding citizens would likely comply with such a directive. This would be a pyrrhic victory for the government, however: The imposition of capital controls would lead to a further decline in confidence in the US dollar, and the cost to the US government of purchasing all the bitcoin custodied by American citizens and residents could exceed $10 trillion, further weakening the US fiscal situation. Nonetheless, the government in the restrictive scenario will have concluded that these are the least bad options.
Confiscatory Taxation
The US government could also use tax policy to restrict the utility of bitcoin and thereby curtail its adoption.
In a world where one bitcoin equals $1.5 million, many of the wealthiest people in the United States will be early bitcoin adopters. Technology entrepreneur Balaji Srinivasan has estimated that at a price of $1 million per bitcoin, the number of bitcoin billionaires will begin to exceed the number of fiat billionaires.[26] This does not imply, however, that the distribution of wealth among bitcoin owners would be more equal than the distribution of wealth among owners of fiat currency today.
Fewer than 2 percent of all bitcoin addresses contain more than one bitcoin, and fewer than 0.3 percent contain more than ten bitcoin. Addresses within that top 0.3 percent own more than 82 percent of all the bitcoin in existence.[27] (See figure 4.) Given that many individuals control multiple wallets, and even allowing for the fact that some of the largest bitcoin addresses belong to cryptocurrency exchanges, these figures likely underestimate the amount of bitcoin wealth concentration. They compare unfavorably to US fiat wealth distribution; in 2019, the top 1 percent held merely 34 percent of all fiat-denominated wealth in the United States.[28]
If bitcoin ownership remains similarly distributed in 2044, those left behind by this monetary revolution—including disenfranchised elites from the previous era—will not go down quietly. Many will decry bitcoin wealth inequality as driven by anti-American speculators and seek to enact policies that restrict the economic power of bitcoin owners.
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Figure 4. Distribution of bitcoin ownership
Credit: Avik Roy, https://public.flourish.studio/visualisation/18651414/.
In 2021, rumors circulated that Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen had proposed to President Joe Biden the institution of an 80 percent tax on cryptocurrency capital gains, a steep increase from the current top long-term capital gains tax rate of 23.8 percent.[29] In 2022, President Biden, building on a proposal by Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren, suggested taxing unrealized capital gains—that is, on-paper increases in the value of assets that the holder has not yet sold.[30] This would be an unprecedented move since it would require people to pay taxes on earnings they have not yet realized.
It has long been argued that taxing unrealized capital gains would violate the US Constitution because unrealized gains do not meet the legal definition of income, and Article I of the Constitution requires that non-income taxes must be levied in proportion to states’ respective populations.[31] A recent case before the Supreme Court, Moore v. United States, gave the court the opportunity to make clear its position on the question; it declined to do so.[32] As a result, it remains eminently possible that a future Congress, supported by a future Supreme Court, will assent to the taxing of unrealized capital gains, and cryptocurrency gains specifically.
Moreover, a presidential administration that does not like the constitutional interpretations of an existing Supreme Court could simply pack the court to ensure more favorable rulings. The FDR administration threatened to do precisely that during the 1930s. The conservative Supreme Court of that era had routinely ruled that FDR’s economically interventionist policies violated the Constitution. In 1937, Roosevelt responded by threatening to appoint six new justices to the Supreme Court in addition to the existing nine. While he was ultimately forced to withdraw his court-packing proposal, the Supreme Court was sufficiently intimidated and began approving New Deal legislation at a rapid pace thereafter.[33]
A unique feature of US tax policy is that US citizens who live abroad are still required to pay US income and capital gains taxes, along with the taxes they pay in the country of their residence. (In all other advanced economies, expatriates only pay taxes once, based on where they live. For example, a French national living and working in Belgium pays Belgian tax rates, not French tax rates, whereas an American in Belgium pays both Belgian and US taxes.) This creates a perverse incentive for Americans living abroad to renounce their US citizenship. Every year, a few thousand Americans do so. However, they must first seek approval from a US embassy on foreign soil and pay taxes on all unrealized capital gains. In a restrictive scenario, in which the US Treasury is starved for revenue, it is easy to imagine the government suspending the ability of Americans to renounce their citizenship, ensuring that expatriates’ income remains taxable regardless of where they live.
Right-Wing Financial Restrictions
While many of the restrictive policies described above have been proposed by politicians affiliated with the Democratic Party, Republican Party officials and representatives in 2044 may be just as willing to amplify populist resentment of the bitcoin elite. The United States is already home to a vocal movement of both American and European intellectuals building a new ideology broadly known as national conservatism, in which the suppression of individual rights is acceptable in the name of the national interest.[34] For example, some national conservatives advocate monetary and tax policies that protect the US dollar against bitcoin, even at the expense of individual property rights.[35]
The USA PATRIOT Act was passed by overwhelming bipartisan congressional majorities weeks after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. It was signed into law by Republican President George W. Bush and included numerous provisions designed to combat the financing of international terrorism and criminal activity, especially by strengthening anti-money-laundering and know-your-customer rules, as well as reporting requirements for foreign bank account holders.[36]
The PATRIOT Act may have helped reduce the risk of terrorism against the US, but it has achieved this at a significant cost to economic freedom, especially for American expatriates and others who use non-US bank accounts for personal or business reasons. Just as FDR used a law from the First World War to confiscate Americans’ gold holdings, in 2044 a restrictive government of either party will find many of the PATRIOT Act’s tools useful to clamp down on bitcoin ownership and usage.
The End of America’s Exorbitant Privilege
Bitcoin is remarkably resilient in its design; its decentralized network will likely continue to function well despite restrictive measures adopted by governments against its use. Today, for instance, a considerable amount of bitcoin trading volume and mining activity occurs in China, despite that country’s prohibition of it, because of the use of virtual private networks (VPNs) and other tools that disguise a user’s geographic location.[37]
If we assume that half of the world’s bitcoin is owned by Americans and further assume that 80 percent of American bitcoin is held by early adopters and other large holders, it is likely that most of that 80 percent is already protected against confiscation through self-custody and offshore contingency planning. Capital controls and restrictions could collapse institutional bitcoin trading volume in the US, but most of this volume would likely move to decentralized exchanges or to jurisdictions outside of the US with less restrictive policies.
A fiscal failure of the US in 2044 will be necessarily accompanied by a reduction in US military power because such power is predicated on enormous levels of deficit-financed defense spending. Hence, the US government will not be as capable in 2044 as it is today of imposing its economic will on other countries. Smaller nations, such as Singapore and El Salvador, could choose to welcome the bitcoin-based capital that the US turns away.[38] The mass departure of bitcoin-based wealth from the US would, of course, make America poorer and further reduce the ability of the US government to fund its spending obligations.
Furthermore, US restriction of bitcoin’s utility will not be enough to convince foreign investors that US Treasuries are worth holding. The main way the US government could make investing in US bonds more attractive would be for the Federal Reserve to dramatically raise interest rates because higher interest rates equate to higher yields on Treasury securities. But this would in turn raise the cost of financing the federal debt, accelerating the US fiscal crisis.
Eventually, foreign investors may require the US to denominate its bonds in bitcoin, or in a foreign currency backed by bitcoin, as a precondition for further investment. This momentous change would end what former French Finance Minister and President Valéry Giscard d’Estaing famously called America’s privilège exorbitant: Its long-standing ability to borrow in its own currency, which has enabled the US to decrease the value of its debts by decreasing the value of the dollar.[39]
If and when US bonds are denominated in bitcoin, the United States will be forced to borrow money the way other countries do: In a currency not of its own making. Under a bitcoin standard, future devaluations of the US dollar would increase, rather than decrease, the value of America’s obligations to its creditors. America’s creditors—holders of US government bonds—would then be in a position to demand various austerity measures, such as requiring that the US close its budget deficits through a combination of large tax increases and spending cuts to Medicare, Social Security, national defense, and other federal programs.
A substantial decline in America’s ability to fund its military would have profound geopolitical implications. A century ago, when the United States eclipsed the United Kingdom as the world’s leading power, the transition was relatively benign. We have no assurances that a future transition will work the same way. Historically, multipolar environments with competing great powers are frequently recipes for world wars.[40]
2. The Palsied Scenario
In medicine, a palsy is a form of paralysis accompanied by involuntary tremors. This term accurately describes my second scenario, in which the macroeconomic tremors accompanying bitcoin’s rise are paired in the US with partisan polarization, bureaucratic conflict, and diminishing American power. In the palsied scenario, the US is unable to act aggressively against bitcoin, but neither is it able to get its fiscal house in order.
Today, partisan polarization in the US is at a modern high.[41] Republicans and Democrats are increasingly sorted by cultural factors: Republicans are disproportionately rural, high school–educated, and white; Democrats are more urban, college-educated, and nonwhite. Independents, who now make up a plurality of the electorate, are forced to choose among the candidates selected for general elections by Republican and Democratic base voters in partisan primaries.[42]
While we can hope that these trends reverse over time, there are reasons to believe they will not. Among other factors, the accelerating development of software capabilities that manipulate behavior at scale, including artificial intelligence—for all of their promise—brings substantial risks in the political sphere. The potential for deepfakes and other forms of mass deception could reduce trust in political parties, elections, and government institutions while further fragmenting the US political environment into smaller subcultural communities. The cumulative effect of this fragmentation may be the inability to achieve consensus on most issues, let alone controversial ones such as reducing federal entitlement spending.
In the palsied scenario, the US government is unable in 2044 to enact most of the restrictive measures described in the previous section. For example, paralysis could prevent Congress and the Federal Reserve from developing a central bank digital currency because of adamant opposition from activists but especially from depository banking institutions, who correctly view such a currency as a mortal threat to their business models. (A retail central bank digital currency obviates the need for individuals and businesses to deposit their money at banks because they could instead hold accounts directly at the Federal Reserve.)[43]
Similarly, in the palsied scenario, Congress would be unable in 2044 to enact confiscatory taxes against bitcoin holders and the wealthy more broadly. Congress would fail to enact these policies for the same reasons it has failed to date: Concerns about such taxes’ constitutionality; opposition from powerful economic interests; and recognition that direct attacks on bitcoin-based capital will drive that capital offshore to the detriment of the United States.
The palsied scenario is no libertarian utopia, however. In such a scenario, the federal government would retain the ability to regulate centralized exchanges, ETFs, and other financial services that facilitate the conversion of US dollars to bitcoin. If a majority of US-held bitcoin becomes owned through ETFs, the federal regulatory agencies would maintain the ability to limit the conversion of bitcoin ETF securities into actual bitcoin, heavily restricting the movement of capital out of US-controlled products.
Most importantly, however, partisan paralysis means that Congress will be unable to solve America’s fiscal crisis. Congress will lack the votes for entitlement reform or other spending cuts. And by 2044, federal spending will continue to increase at such a rapid clip that no amount of tax revenue will be able to keep pace.
Under the palsied scenario, Americans who hold bitcoin will be better able to protect their savings from government intrusion than under the restrictive scenario. They will not have to flee the country to own bitcoin, for example. This suggests that a significant proportion of the bitcoin community—both individuals and entrepreneurs—will remain in the United States and likely emerge as an economically powerful constituency. But the institutional environment in which they live and work will be frozen in dysfunction. Anti-bitcoin policy makers and pro-bitcoin political donors may end up in a stalemate.
As in the restrictive scenario, in the palsied scenario the failure of the dollar-denominated Treasury bond market could force the United States to eventually get its fiscal house in order. In both cases, creditors may very well demand that the Treasury Department issue debt securities that are collateralized by hard assets. By 2044, bitcoin will have over three decades of validation as a preeminent store of value, and the American bitcoin community will be well positioned to help the US adapt to its new circumstances.
3. The Munificent Scenario
The munificent scenario is both the least intuitive and the most optimistic scenario for America in 2044. In the munificent scenario, US policy makers respond to the fiscal and monetary crisis of 2044 by actively moving to remain ahead of events, instead of being compelled to react to forces ostensibly outside of their control.
The munificent scenario involves the US doing in 2044 something similar to what El Salvador did in 2019 or Argentina did in 2023 when those countries elected Nayib Bukele and Javier Milei to their presidencies, respectively. Though Bukele and Milei are different leaders with somewhat differing philosophies, they have both explicitly expressed support for bitcoin, with Bukele establishing bitcoin as legal tender in El Salvador[44] and Milei pledging to replace the Argentine peso with the dollar[45] while legalizing bitcoin.[46] Milei has also used his presidential authority to significantly reduce Argentine public expenditures in inflation-adjusted terms, thereby achieving a primary budget surplus.[47]
Imagine that in November 2044, the US elects a dynamic, pro-bitcoin president who pledges to adopt bitcoin as legal tender alongside the dollar (à la Bukele) and works with Treasury bondholders to reduce the US debt burden (à la Milei). One could imagine a grand fiscal bargain in which Treasury bondholders accept a one-time, partial default in exchange for Medicare and Social Security reform and an agreement to back the US dollar with bitcoin going forward, at a peg of sixty-seven satoshis to the dollar (that is, $1.5 million per bitcoin). Bondholders will likely be glad to accept a partial default in exchange for significant reforms that put the US on a sustainable fiscal and monetary footing for the future.
Such reforms need not punish the elderly and other vulnerable populations. A growing body of research suggests that fiscal solvency need not be at odds with social welfare. For example, the Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity published a health care reform plan that was introduced by Arkansas Rep. Bruce Westerman and Indiana Sen. Mike Braun in 2020 as the Fair Care Act. The plan would reduce the deficit by over $10 trillion in a thirty-year period and make the health care system fiscally solvent while achieving universal coverage.[48] The bill achieves this in two primary ways: First, it means-tests health care subsidies so that taxpayers are only funding the cost of care for the poor and the middle class, not the wealthy. Second, it reduces the cost of subsidizing health care by incentivizing competition and innovation. In these ways, the proposal increases the economic security of lower-income Americans while also increasing the fiscal sustainability of the federal government.
Similarly, the US could reform Social Security by transitioning the Social Security trust fund from Treasury bonds to bitcoin (or bitcoin-denominated Treasury bonds).[49] Such an idea is less practical in the era of high volatility that has characterized bitcoin’s early history, but by 2044 the bitcoin-dollar exchange rate is likely to be more stable. The post-ETF maturation of bitcoin trading, as large financial institutions introduce traditional hedging practices to the asset, has significantly reduced bitcoin’s dollar-denominated price volatility. Soon, bitcoin’s price volatility may resemble that of a stable asset such as gold. By collateralizing Social Security with bitcoin, the US could ensure that Social Security lives up to its name, providing actual economic security to American retirees in their golden years.
The munificent scenario has additional benefits. The US government, by directly aligning itself with bitcoin’s monetary principles, could help make the twenty-first century another American one. It is highly unlikely that America’s primary geopolitical rival, China, will legalize a currency such as bitcoin that it cannot control. America’s culture of entrepreneurship, married with sound money, could lead to an unprecedented era of economic growth and prosperity for the United States. But this would require US leaders to place the nation’s long-term interests ahead of short-term political temptations.
The Satoshi Papers is now available for pre-order in the Bitcoin Magazine Store.
[1] A widely held view among academic economists is that for something to be considered money, it must serve as a store of value, a medium of exchange, and a unit of account. These features of money are not binary, but rather reside on a continuum; some forms of money are better stores of value, and others might be more widely used in trade and commerce. Bitcoin’s emergence as the premier store of value is the most significant development because this is what fiat currencies do most poorly. See Friedrich Hayek, Denationalisation of Money, 2nd ed. (London: Profile Books, 1977), 56–57.
[2] Congressional Budget Office, “The Long-Term Budget Outlook: 2024 to 2054,” March 20, 2024, https://www.cbo.gov/publication/59711.
[3] Congressional Budget Office, “Long-Term Economic Projections,” March 2024, https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2024-03/57054-2024-03-LTBO-econ.xlsx.
[4] Congressional Budget Office, “The Long-Term Budget Outlook Under Alternative Scenarios for the Economy and the Budget,” May 21, 2024, https://www.cbo.gov/publication/60169.
[5] Credit Suisse AG, “Credit Suisse Global Wealth Report 2023,” accessed June 16, 2024, https://www.credit-suisse.com/about-us/en/reports-research/global-wealth-report.html.
[6] Avik Roy, “Bitcoin and the U.S. Fiscal Reckoning,” National Affairs, Fall 2021. https://nationalaffairs.com/publications/detail/bitcoin-and-the-us-fiscal-reckoning.
[7] Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, “Federal Debt Held by Federal Reserve Banks,” accessed June 16, 2024, https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=jwFo.
[8] Lowell R. Ricketts, “Quantitative Easing Explained,” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, accessed June 16, 2024, https://files.stlouisfed.org/files/htdocs/pageone-economics/uploads/newsletter/2011/201104.pdf.
[9] Atish R. Ghosh et al., “Fiscal Fatigue, Fiscal Space and Debt Sustainability in Advanced Economies,” Economic Journal 123, no. 566 (February 2013): F4–F30, https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/ecoj.12010.
[10] Paul Winfree, “The Looming Debt Spiral: Analyzing the Erosion of U.S. Fiscal Space,” March 5, 2024, https://epicforamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Fiscal-Space-March-2024.pdf.
[11] Coinmarketcap.com, “Bitcoin Price Today,” accessed June 16, 2024, https://coinmarketcap.com/currencies/bitcoin/.
[12] Coinmarketcap.com, “Bitcoin Price Today.”
[13] Ray Dalio, Principles for Navigating Big Debt Crises (Westport, CT: Bridgewater, 2018).
[14] When the denarius was introduced circa 211 BC, it contained around 4.5 grams of silver. In AD 64, the Roman Emperor Nero reduced the amount of silver to 3.5 grams. By the time of Diocletian’s reign, there was almost no silver left in the denarius, and the currency was abolished. For further reading on hyperinflation in ancient Rome, see H. J. Haskell, The New Deal in Old Rome: How Government in the Ancient World Tried to Deal With Modern Problems (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1947).
[15] Antony Kropff, “An English Translation of the Edict on Maximum Prices, Also Known as the Price Edict of Diocletian,” April 27, 2016, https://kark.uib.no/antikk/dias/priceedict.pdf.
[16] Richard M. Nixon, “Address to the Nation Outlining a New Economic Policy,” August 15, 1971, https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/address-the-nation-outlining-new-economic-policy-the-challenge-peace.
[17] Richard M. Nixon, “Address to the Nation.”
[18] Vernon Smith and Arlington Williams, “On Nonbinding Price Controls in a Competitive Market,” American Economic Review 71: 467–74.
[19] Swen Lorenz, “3 Lessons I Learned From Jim Grant, the Wall Street Cult Hero,” accessed July 5, 2024, https://www.undervalued-shares.com/weekly-dispatches/3-lessons-i-learned-from-jim-grant-the-wall-street-cult-hero/.
[20] Avik Roy, “Bitcoin and the U.S. Fiscal Reckoning,” National Affairs, Fall 2021.
[21] US Congress, “The Gold Standard Act of 1900,” accessed June 16, 2024, https://www2.econ.iastate.edu/classes/econ355/choi/1900mar14.html.
[22] Gary Richardson, Alejandro Komai, and Michael Gou, “Gold Reserve Act of 1934,” accessed June 16, 2024, https://www.federalreservehistory.org/essays/gold-reserve-act.
[23] Fitch Ratings, “Overview of Argentine Capital Controls (History and Recent Impact on Corporates),” April 6, 2021, https://www.fitchratings.com/research/corporate-finance/overview-of-argentine-capital-controls-history-recent-impact-on-corporates-06-04-2021.
[24] Robert Kahn, “The Case for Chinese Capital Controls,” Council on Foreign Relations, February 2016, https://www.cfr.org/sites/default/files/pdf/2016/02/February%202016%20GEM.pdf.
[25] International Monetary Fund, “Executive Board Concludes the Review of the Institutional View on the Liberalization and Management of Capital Flows,” press release, March 30, 2022. https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2022/03/30/pr2297-executive-board-concludes-the-review-of-the-institutional-view-on-capital-flows.
[26] Balaji Srinivasan, “The Billionaire Flippening,” February 5, 2021, https://balajis.com/p/the-billionaire-flippening.
[27] “Bitcoin Rich List,” accessed July 7, 2024, https://bitinfocharts.com/top-100-richest-bitcoin-addresses.html.
[28] Congressional Budget Office, “Trends in the Distribution of Family Wealth, 1989 to 2019,” September 27, 2022, https://www.cbo.gov/publication/57598.
[29] William White, “80% Crypto Capital Gains Tax? 15 Things We Know About the Rumors,” Yahoo! Finance, April 23, 2021, https://finance.yahoo.com/news/80-crypto-capital-gains-tax-153027836.html#.
[30] Garrett Watson and Erica York, “Proposed Minimum Tax on Billionaire Capital Gains Takes Tax Code in Wrong Direction,” Tax Foundation, March 30, 2022, https://taxfoundation.org/blog/biden-billionaire-tax-unrealized-capital-gains/.
[31] Steven Calabresi, “Taxes on Wealth and on Unrealized Capital Gains Are Unconstitutional,” Reason, October 11, 2023, https://reason.com/volokh/2023/10/11/taxes-on-wealth-and-on-unrealized-capital-gains-are-unconstitutional/.
[32] Wall Street Journal Editorial Board, “A Supreme Court Mistake on Wealth Taxes,” The Wall Street Journal, June 20, 2024, https://www.wsj.com/articles/moore-v-u-s-supreme-court-mandatory-repatriation-tax-brett-kavanaugh-amy-coney-barrett-23d99510.
[33] Charles Lipson, “Packing the Court, Then and Now,” Discourse, April 21, 2021, https://www.discoursemagazine.com/p/packing-the-court-then-and-now.
[34] Avik Roy, “Freedom Conservatism Is Different, and That Matters,” National Review, July 18, 2023, https://www.nationalreview.com/2023/07/freedom-conservatism-is-different-and-that-matters/.
[35] Peter Ryan, “Is Bitcoin ‘America First’?” The American Conservative, February 13, 2024, https://www.theamericanconservative.com/is-bitcoin-america-first/.
[36] USA PATRIOT Act of 2001, Congress.gov, accessed June 16, 2024, https://www.congress.gov/107/plaws/publ56/PLAW-107publ56.htm.
[37] Ryan Browne, “Bitcoin Production Roars Back in China Despite Beijing’s Ban on Crypto Mining,” CNBC.com, May 18, 2022, https://www.cnbc.com/2022/05/18/china-is-second-biggest-bitcoin-mining-hub-as-miners-go-underground.html.
[38] Some bitcoin-based wealth may be denominated in fiat currencies, such as equity stakes in digital-asset exchanges such as Coinbase and bitcoin-mining companies such as Marathon Digital Holdings.
[39] Barry Eichengreen, Exorbitant Privilege: The Rise and Fall of the Dollar and the Future of the International Monetary System (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011).
[40] Donald Kagan, On the Origins of War: And the Preservation of Peace (New York: Anchor, 1996).
[41] Ezra Klein, Why We’re Polarized (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2020).
[42] Nick Troiano, The Primary Solution: Rescuing Our Democracy from the Fringes (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2024).
[43] Avik Roy, “There’s No Such Thing as an ‘American-Style’ Central Bank Digital Currency,” Forbes, April 12, 2023, https://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2023/04/12/theres-no-such-thing-as-an-american-style-central-bank-digital-currency/.
[44] Avik Roy, “El Salvador Enacts Bitcoin Law, Ushering In New Era Of Global Monetary Inclusion,” Forbes, June 9, 2021, https://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2021/06/09/el-salvador-enacts-bitcoin-law-ushering-in-new-era-of-global-monetary-inclusion/.
[45] Ryan Dubé and Santiago Pérez, “Argentina’s New President Wants to Adopt the U.S. Dollar as the National Currency,” The Wall Street Journal, November 20, 2023, https://www.wsj.com/world/americas/argentinas-new-president-wants-to-adopt-the-u-s-dollar-as-national-currency-86da3444.
[46] On Twitter/X, Milei’s foreign minister and economic adviser Diana Mondino (@DianaMondino, December 21, 2023) declared, “We ratify and confirm that in Argentina contracts can be agreed in Bitcoin.”
[47] “The spending cuts that allowed Milei to turn around Argentina’s economy,” Buenos Aires Times, April 23, 2024, https://www.batimes.com.ar/news/economy/the-expenses-cut-by-milei-to-achieve-a-fiscal-surplus.phtml.
[48] Avik Roy, “The Fair Care Act of 2020: Market-Based Universal Coverage,” Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity, October 12, 2020, https://freopp.org/the-fair-care-act-of-2020-market-based-universal-coverage-cc4caa4125ae.
[49] Under 2024 forecasts, the Social Security Trust Fund will be fully depleted by 2033. I assume, for the purposes of my scenario analysis, that Congress finds a short-term solution before then that postpones Social Security’s reckoning past 2044.
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