The whole speech is worth the read, the synopsis is:
"To conclude, I emphasize three points. First, the U.S. dollar payment system is very good, and it is getting better. Second, the potential benefits of a Federal Reserve CBDC are unclear. Third, developing a CBDC could, I believe, pose considerable risks.
So, our work is cut out for us as we proceed to rigorously evaluate the case for developing a Federal Reserve CBDC. Even if other central banks issue successful CBDCs, we cannot assume that the Federal Reserve should issue a CBDC. The process that Chair Powell recently announced is a genuinely open process without a foregone conclusion, although obviously I think the bar to establishing a U.S. CBDC is a high one. The upcoming discussion paper that constitutes the first step in this process will importantly ask for input from the public. I look forward to reviewing public input on the discussion paper, which will inform the Federal Reserve's ultimate evaluation of a potential CBDC."
Parachute Pants and Central Bank Money, Vice Chair for Supervision Randal K. Quarles at the 113th Annual Utah Bankers Association Convention, Sun Valley, Idaho
Thanks for the response and clarification. What's the best way to discover papers on hypothetical US CBDCs? I've seen one international paper and one on US FedAccounts.
> Almost 50 central banks have already launched designs for central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) or prototypes ... The paper discusses ... what they imply for the financial system and the central bank of the future. It sets out the requirements for a “minimally invasive” CBDC design ... digital banknotes that run on “intermediated” or “hybrid” CBDC architectures show promise. Supported with technology to facilitate record-keeping by private sector entities of direct claims on the central bank, their economic design should emphasise the use of the CBDC as medium of exchange.
> Congress should authorize the Federal Reserve to give everyone—individuals, businesses, and institutions—the option to maintain accounts at the central bank. We call these accounts FedAccounts. Unlike the CBDC approaches currently under discussion, which would use complicated and inefficient distributed ledger technology and be walled off from the existing system of money and payments, FedAccounts would be seamlessly interoperable with the mainstream payment system, relying on technologies that the Federal Reserve has used for decades.
Quelle horreur - has Mr Adams not noticed that that vast majority of financial transactions are completely digital, with all the risks that he details? Not blockchain (thank god) but every card debit/credit/charge transaction is performed entirely without notes,coin, or gold and is recorded and tracked with similar detail to blockchain ledgers.
Sure, most transactions are digital already. This is about the removal of physical cash as an alternative, and the downsides that presents. Especially interesting is the sudden feasibility of negative interest rates enforced across the board, and the inability to just "keep cash" as an alternative.
In terms of privacy, it IS possible. Look at Monero; but there it would be very very hard to get the government to accept a plan that included that level of privacy. I suppose that one may still have anonymous wallets, which could ensure a certain amount of anonymity absent requirements to the contrary. This whole phenomenon has the eerie likeness of Revelations, buying selling without a number, etc. Let's not intentionally make it come true guys.
> This is about the removal of physical cash as an alternative
No it's not.
Nowhere in the article does it suggest that, nor is it being contemplated in any serious current policy proposals.
It's about having digital cash transactions handled directly via government ledgers rather than via private intermediaries like MasterCard and Visa and PayPal. Which has all sorts of benefits. After all, money is a public good -- why should digital money be handled exclusively by private corporations making a profit off of it?
If government is in charge of printing the physical money people use directly, it's pretty logically consistent for it also to be in charge of digital ledgers in some form as well. We don't let MasterCard and Visa print up their own hundred dollar bills, after all.
Advocates of CBDCs suggest that they are necessary, certainly useful, in addressing multiple issues emerging across the global financial system of late. These issues include: ...
Zero-lower bound interest rates (i.e., negative interest rates) – the existence of physical cash results in the severe curtailment of the ability of central banks to lower official interest rates below the zero bound (i.e., implement negative nominal interest rates) given the risk that citizens are likely to withdraw from the financial system by hoarding physical cash if negative nominal interest rates are implemented[12].
"
If that's part of the rationale, what do you think is implied about the continuing existence of physical cash?
The article you're linking to explicitly talks about cash being preserved:
> The proposal is for a central bank to divide the monetary base into two separate local currencies—cash and electronic money (e-money). E-money would be issued only electronically and would pay the policy rate of interest, and cash would have an exchange rate—the conversion rate—against e-money. This conversion rate is key to the proposal.
So considering they're going to all the trouble of defining an exchange rate, what I think is implied about the continuing existence of physical cash is... that it will continue to exist.
The goal here is very explicitly about making negative interest rates workable, not eliminating cash.
You’re right, the article I linked to is more about how to eliminate a pesky attribute of physical cash, not the physical manifestation itself (which I’m frankly less concerned with). My initial comment was mostly meant to be about the removal of physical cash as an alternative to something with a negative nominal yield, which a dual currency does accomplish, it would no longer be an alternative. But separately, I do think the eventual intention is to also get rid of the physical manifestation entirely, with a dual currency as a way to ease toward that.
In case you hadn't seen it, Australia tried to ban the use of cash payments for higher value transactions. It didn't end up passing but it is expected to be revived in future.
Silly Australians, you just have to make cash socially unacceptable.
Make cashless attractive for key businesses (rent, utilities, groceries, the popular things), make cards attractive for consumers and soon enough those paying in cash are automatically assumed to be drug dealers or worse.
Then reduce the number of available banknotes, reduce the maximum denomination and implement whatever tracking you want.
Just don't do it too soon like Germany or people will cling on to their cash. Not that it helps them much.
>We don't let MasterCard and Visa print up their own hundred dollar bills, after all.
Some financial institutions may engage in fractional reserve lending, and if an entity can "securitize" or otherwise creatively determine the value of any assets or liabilities, then effectively they are allowed to create their own money.
I mean you eventually run out of people to shoot to take bags from if you can't reasonably create more of the currency through economic activity and war is prohibitively expensive. It's also not likely the persons holding the bags that can already pay for their own troops wouldn't do so.
In fact, Roman gold currency was invented primarily to pay the troops. As a result gold as a currency only circulated around regions where the military was fighting, and in peaceful areas far from warfare the usual methods of debts and IOUs were used to pay for things.
If you’re still curious, read Graeber’s “Debt: The First 5000 years” which delves into the Roman monetary system in detail.
In fact, the military (and the police) is what actually enforces national currency in the utmost top level.
Look what happens if you don’t pay your taxes (which is a way to enforce usage of a currency), you’ll be arrested and will go to jail.
And if you think about how the US dollar remained a global reserve currency through the petrodollar (explicitly backed by the US military protecting Saudi Arabia’s oil fields in return to its oil be exclusively sold with dollars), then it’s apparent that guns are what makes the money go round.
Who were Napoleon's financiers? Hitler's? UK during WW2?
It's generally the case that the politicians control the Armies during peacetime, but historically, money is the big limiting factor so banks have incredible power.
> In a room sit three great men, a king, a priest, and a rich man with his gold. Between them stands a sellsword, a little man of common birth and no great mind. Each of the great ones bids him slay the other two. ‘Do it,’ says the king, ‘for I am your lawful ruler.’ ‘Do it,’ says the priest, ‘for I command you in the names of the gods.’ ‘Do it,’ says the rich man, ‘and all this gold shall be yours.’ So tell me—who lives and who dies?
> "The king, the priest, the rich man — who lives and who dies? Who will the swordsman obey? It's a riddle without an answer, or rather, too many answers. All depends on the man with the sword.
> "And yet he is no one," Varys said. "He has neither crown nor gold nor favor of the gods, only a piece of pointed steel."
> "That piece of steel is the power of life and death."
> "Just so … yet if it is the swordsmen who rule us in truth, why do we pretend our kings hold the power? Why should a strong man with a sword ever obey a child king like Joffrey, or a wine-sodden oaf like his father?"
> "Because these child kings and drunken oafs can call other strong men, with other swords."
> "Then these other swordsmen have the true power. Or do they? Whence came their swords? Why do they obey?" Varys smiled.
Game of Thrones is a fiction. And a fairly ahistorical one. This military historian's blog has several texts regarding its flaws. I can recommend reading them, they are well written.
There is a reason why we distinguish between force and power. People generally perform better in societies where they aren't constantly threatened into obedience.
GRRM's world is a lot more cynical and obsessed with raw force than our own historical record.
> People generally perform better in societies where they aren't constantly threatened into obedience.
These should be the first words out of any teacher's mouth in any course in history or civics. It would clear up a lot of confusion built into the vague notions of 'progress'.
History is full of examples like this. Rich man is killed first, without consequence. Then probably the king. The guards have no loyalty once the King is dead, but the swordsman will never escape the religion.
> With cash, we don't know who is using the 100 dollar bill today ... a key difference with CBDC is that the central bank will have absolute control on the rules and regulations that determine the expression of that central bank liability .. also we will have the technology to enforce that ... if an advanced economy issues a CBDC, and someone in a 3rd country wants to use it, it will require the consent of the central bank of the residence of that person, therefore the degree of control will be far bigger.
> It is crucial to trace transactions, particularly large ones, to an individual or entity. For account-based CBDCs, issuing central banks would retain control over cross-border usage. Restricting non-residents’ access reduces the risk of volatile flows, and of currency substitution in recipient economies.
Depends on the implementation details. If private keys are distributed only by central bank, then yes. But if they are created anonymously at the edges, with multiple private keys allowed per person, then they don’t necessarily know who controls what wallet.
Some markets. All kinds of financial transactions are happening as we speak in various DeFi ecosystems on a permissionless basis - you don't need an account, just a wallet.
Before say "your wallet is your account", only sort of. You can have any number of wallets through any number of applications that support it, including rolling your own if you so chose. Certainly nothing like the KYC/AML required of, say, Robinhood.
We’re talking about the government here, it’s entirely reasonable to assume they’re going to start regulating this kind of thing by imposing rules on citizens.
The most likely thing is to add onerous reporting rules on US citizens since they can’t directly change any of these protocols. Or, declare that participating in DeFi without a license is illegal. Again, they can’t ban DeFi because it’s decentralized but they can certainly regulate you and I’s interaction with said systems.
It's currently in broad strokes, what's being enabled is micromanagement. You don't have enough calorie credits for that uber, better get hiking.[1] The global food council will also be prohibiting purchases of meat until your next birthday.
Do we have taxes on gluttony? sloth? lust? anger? I never noticed.
What we have are taxes and other limitations on health-harming substances, like cigarettes, strong alcohol, and even on excessive sugar in certain places. This is not because the nicotine high, or inebriation, or feeling the sweetness are morally objectionable. This is because inhaled smoke, large quantities of alcohol, and large quantities of sugar lead to health problems, and treating these problems is expensive. It's more like a road tax, higher on heavy vehicles that damage roads faster.
>>This is because inhaled smoke, large quantities of alcohol, and large quantities of sugar lead to health problems, and treating these problems is expensive. It's more like a road tax, higher on heavy vehicles that damage roads faster.
This all assumes that the cost of medical expenses should be socialized.
Exactly. The entire society had to shoulder the weight of the consequences of bad habits of some.
Were the costs not socialized, there'd be a bit less of a point to tax cigarettes so much: you want to get lung cancer and you are ready to pay for it, go ahead and smoke three packs a day! But this is not how it works today.
Every major category of goods/services has an effect on a large fraction of society. It doesn't follow that we should socialize the expense of every good/service that fits this criteria. It's absolutely not established that doing so, as a rule, does more good than harm, and we have plenty of empirical evidence that more free-market-based societies are more effective at developing themselves than more socialized ones.
Sin taxes are opposed by the argument that they disproportionately affect poor people. If they could target them based on your income bracket or something, they might get a lot more popular.
IME few people genuinely care about the poor beyond micromanaging them for their own good or getting them to be out of sight out of mind.
Sin taxes, generally speaking, are how the HN class incentivizes the landscaper class to behave more like them (to varying degrees and with various pretexts as needed per issue).
Currently they are mostly limited by the middle class's ability to exempt itself. Finer targeting will enable them to go hog wild.
> can all be drafted into the service of CBDC initiatives which require digital identity for digital currency wallets
This is why initiatives like Decentralised Identifiers are so important. There's simply no government or organisation on the planet responsible enough to wield that power. At least it provides an alternative to centralised behemoths.
> With cash, we don't know who is using the 100 dollar bill today
Some CBDCs like GNU Taler also have that property. Tokens are signed with blind signatures so the exchange doesn't know the identifier of the tokens you got, just how much of it gave you.
Taler is a pretty great system. It is anonymous for the payer, but doesn't facilitate money laundering because the receiver of the money can be identified. It's also fairly cheap to run. I hope it gets adopted as a digital currency.
I think people have to recognize that both digital technology and the process of "modernity" and state-formation of the 20th century make it a lot harder for unsurveiled spaces to exist because suddenly everyone is operating in the same "space", a single market.
There used to be a rough equilibrium that it was difficult to move large amounts of money around, especially internationally, but small amounts of cash were totally invisible to the state. This ensured a certain amount of stability; the state control could be exercised at the border, where anything of significant value had to be declared to customs, but inside the state you could go about your business. It was pretty difficult for a state to spin up a subversive organisation or competing industry inside another state's borders. Conversely, to commit a large crime required serious planning to move the money, and it was infeasible to move it overseas.
Technology is forcing the dichotomy towards either ubiquitous surveillance of absolutely every transaction, versus increasingly large "perfect" crimes carried out by people who are untouchably overseas.
> A huge trove of secret government documents reveals for the first time how the giants of Western banking move trillions of dollars in suspicious transactions, enriching themselves and their shareholders while facilitating the work of terrorists, kleptocrats, and drug kingpins. And the US government, despite its vast powers, fails to stop it.
> Every American should be horrified by this latest report from the ICIJ; every American should be outraged that the U.S. is now second only to the Cayman Islands for hiding dirty money for criminals.
It's unclear how surveillance of mom & pop CBDC payments could help when trillions of dollars of suspicious Bank activity can continue unabated.
That article is dated 2020, while I'm referring more to changes throughout the 20th century, the Bretton Woods era etc. The UK had formal capital controls until 1979, for example.
> the US government, despite its vast powers, fails to stop it.
Yes, and so long as it fails to stop it there will be pressure to "do something".
And establishing a threshold below which there is no surveillance is unstable, because immediately you have to face "structuring", and the digital space makes this worse. If there were to be truly free no-surveillance payments of $1, say, people would move a stolen billion as one billion payments of $1. This is already happening with gift cards: https://www.napier.ai/post/prepaid-cards
The truly big money laundering is incredibly difficult to stop, because it can fund its own bribery zone that can extend to entire countries.
The question then becomes, do states with absolute economic control or criminal groups pose the greater risk to society?
I think history builds a case for the answer pretty well. Even criminal groups can't touch the level of mayhem and death caused by the string of overly powerful human rulers of entire countries. Maybe criminal groups just need to grow to compete. Perhaps they are the same in some cases.
if you assume that the world order is controlled by the 1000 most powerful / wealthiest individuals in the world, they have more to gain from self custody enabled by bitcoin than everyone else. they also probably benefit more from financial privacy more than anyone else . Their incentives are aligned with bitcoin. Now they may not want to hold all their wealth in bitcoin, but surely some integer percentage, as big as 20%.
Completely disagree. They have even more to gain by being in absolute control, and bitcoin cannot be completely controlled, unlike a financial instrument which can be adjusted at the whim of the court systems and by decree from a central institution
There is no central court or institution. Trillionaires don’t trust those things. The only absolute control is in themselves. The principal agent problem is not solvable at that level.
Trillionaires still work in teams; they don't operate in a vacuum. Their influence extends throughout government, which is how they enforce their will, using the police, military, and court systems.
Cryptocurrencies exist that preserve privacy somewhat - bitcoin if you are knowledgeable, pay fees, and are very careful; monero pretty much perfectly; and tornado.cash for obfuscating ETH if you are familiar with that ecosystem.
However, there is an analog version of financial privacy that totally 100% breaks the chain of digital tracking - cash and gold coins.
IMO, if you oppose financial privacy in digital assets, then it is hypocritical to not advocate for the total ban of cash and gold. I don’t see any way to square this circle. If you still support cash, then you should advocate for some dollar limit under which privacy is OK for crypto.
Cash is anonymous for now, but all the notes are serial numbered, and recorded at some stops along the banking chain. Traffic analysis is possible with the system as it is.
The very limited number of licit places to translate gold and silver coins into other forms of money are a huge barrier to avoiding tracking.
Huh. Since Sacagawea dollars never took off (and therefore aren't always accepted as currency everywhere, and their presence would therefore be more traceable), that means that coins like quarters are the most untraceable US currency. That's something like $10-20 billion worth of quarters in circulation (who knows?).
...I wonder if that explains why there was a coin shortage in the depths of 2020 during the peak of the pandemic, when people were panic-buying lots of stuff? Maybe someone (or lots of people with the same idea) took out a lot of quarters and dimes (which have the same denomination-value-per-unit-weight) from banks with the idea they are untraceable, unlike paper cash.
And nickels and pennies, although heavier for a given total value, actually have a metal melt value about the same as their denomination.
I can totally see why people would panic-buy lots and lots of coins. The whole "people aren't going out to eat as much" argument didn't make sense to me. People panic-hoarding untraceable assets (some with actual metal value that has the added benefit of being inflation-proof, although illegal to actually melt down) does make sense.
"In normal circumstances, retail transactions and coin recyclers return a significant amount of coins to circulation on a daily basis. However, precautions taken to slow the spread of the virus have resulted in reduced retail sales activity and significantly decreased deposits from third-party coin processors, resulting in increased orders for newly minted coins produced by the United States Mint (Mint). Third-party coin processors and retail activity account for the majority of coins put into circulation each year. For example, in 2019, the Mint contributed 17% of newly-minted circulating coins paid into the supply chain, with the remainder coming from third-party coin processors and retail activity.
Simply put, there is an adequate amount of coins in the economy, but the slowed pace of circulation has meant that sufficient quantities of coins are sometimes not readily available where needed. You may be experiencing this in your local communities. We are asking for your help in improving this coin supply issue."
We don't live in a Mad Max dystopia or at the edge of nation-wide starvation. The things I mentioned are normal commodities. No idea why you feel the need to bring prostitution or odd choices like food (which spoils) into it?
You're being downvoted but this is already happening at a large scale in rural America in places like Kentucky, where food stamps are used to buy cases of Pepsi to use in an informal barter economy.
People will inevitably circumvent the system if it becomes overregulated. It is still one step closer to Orwellian control for the majority of the population.
How do people do price discovery in USD? Why do things cost what they do? Because people price things in it. At some point people will need to start accepting it for goods and services in order to make it real. Ideally there'd be no need to use fiat at all.
Most fundamentally, the USD is backed by the price of oil. The price of everything else is somehow derived from this. The USA's military will probably destroy any country that attempts to sell oil for any other currency. Can you imagine what would happen if someone sells barrels for XMR? The USD would be obsolete in no time.
Part of the dominance of fiat is the effect of lending and investment markets on business cash flows. Reported earnings are a tax liability for an individual, but they are an asset to a business, which increases the value of their equity and increase their debt ceiling. In an inflationary monetary system, the most important thing is asset leverage, so privacy is a bad thing. It's a funny thing actually. The SEC deals mainly with corporate over-reporting and IRS with individual under-reporting.
There is a "Gresham's Law" kind of question here, whether 'better' is actually better.
Well to be fair what was happening to Britney in large part preceded the writing of the episode (and IRL there was way less tech involved), so it's uncertain if the black mirror episode took inspiration from real life.
A couple of years ago there were allegations that David Cameron had performed sexual acts on a pig as part of a hazing ritual in his school days. There was no compelling evidence, but on account of it being extremely funny (and relatively inconsequential) everyone more or less accepted it as fact.
The same administration (and media) is suggesting making life as hard as possible to not inject yourself with an experimental drug (which never even completed animal testing).
> CNN medical contributor Leana Wen says that life needs to be "hard" for unvaccinated Americans, with "twice weekly testings."
> “Now we need to go to community-by-community, neighborhood-by-neighborhood, and oftentimes, door-to-door — literally knocking on doors — to get help to the remaining people" who need to be vaccinated, Biden said Tuesday.
Now, imagine -- they can turn off our finances if you don't comply with exactly what's being suggested. You cannot travel, you must inject yourself with w.e. they want, etc. etc. You must NOT have an abortion if you have X characteristics and you Must have an abortion if you aren't married, etc. Crazy stuff can happen.
In LA they were already shutting off people's water which didn't comply with state orders on the number of people in a home:
I cannot imagine what would happen to all those people if they attended the party that wasn't state sanctioned. This is super dangerous territory. It's why everyone should be opposed to cryptocurrencies that are centrally controlled and not anonymous.
Even Bitcoin has much of the same issues, imagine if the U.S. gov blacklisted your wallet and anyone doing business with a given address would be arrested... the end results would be the same.
You actually do not need go far to answer most of the questions you are thinking through.
Australia (and to lesser degree Sweden ) are considered to be forerunners, the test-environments for the policies advocated by EU, Left politicians, and global tycoons.
>"...
Within days of the COVID-19 outbreak in Australia, most shops began eschewing cash, with a preference for cards. And here’s the thing – most of us quickly complied. Recently, banking experts have said that over the 12 weeks or so that the pandemic was at a crisis point across the nation, the digital banking revolution sped up rapidly, by about five years.
..." [1]
Anonymity brings a way to evade authorities.
If authorities are 'bad', anonymity is 'good'.
If authorities are 'good', anonymity is 'bad'.
So for the part of the population that believes in individual rights and ability of an individual to decide what to put into their bodies, how to defense themselves/etc -- the authority is bad.
For the part of the population that trusts pundits, government intelligence agencies, government's health organizations -- the authority is good, therefore anonymity is bad.
Perhaps these two opposite mindsets can not live peacefully in one country forever.
So periodically, they get into a fight, and decides who will claim the victory. The victorious then,
will try to erase part of the history that makes them look bad.
And then, the whole cycle will start again. It takes about 5-8 generations. So around 200-300 years years.
It is panful to watch, unnecessary and really bad for humanity -- but it seems like we are not destined to get out of that cycle
There are solution to it, I believe. But neither in western countries, nor globally -- we are going, in the directions of those solutions...
> So for the part of the population that believes in individual rights and ability of an individual to decide what to put into their bodies, how to defense themselves/etc -- the authority is bad.
> For the part of the population that trusts pundits, government intelligence agencies, government's health organizations -- the authority is good, therefore anonymity is bad.
Most things are pretty grey - not black & white. So there's not a clear good/bad side. Which is the reason people want personal freedoms and you could want anonymity regardless of how "good" you think your government is.
>"...
Most things are pretty grey - not black & white. So there's not a clear good/bad side. Which is the reason people want personal freedoms and you could want anonymity regardless of how "good" you think your government is.
.."
I agree with you.
1) complexity of science grows every year.
It takes a life-time to become infection disease specialist, immunologist, financial guru, constitutional lawyer, environmental scientist.
2) sophistication of deceit also grows with time, if nothing is done (because the reward for the successful deceit grows with time).
3) myself, there is no way I can make my own decisions about complex things. I need pundits, that I can *trust*.
4) but with the growing sophistication of deceit -- how can figure out who to trust?
That's where the division between the two mind sets shows up.
Because what's relatively stable throughout the time -- are human character traits...
That division, in turn, later on creates the conflicts every so often -- as I mentioned.
> 3) myself, there is no way I can make my own decisions about complex things. I need pundits, that I can trust.
> 4) but with the growing sophistication of deceit -- how can figure out
I agree with you, but it seems like you're again thinking that everything can be known / black and white. The experts disagree on some very important things quite often. So it's not only who to trust - but is that trustable person even correct in their analysis?
This is where personal choice and freedoms and democracy shine.
a) people that do live in a structured society, have to trust somebody. Because one cannot be an expert in everything.
In the sea of deceit, figuring out the 'right pundits, rights representatives' to trust is very very difficult.
Certainly, once a person figures out the 'members-to-trust', then dealing with discrepancies, mistakes, and differences of opinion within that circle -- is somewhat a different matter.
Those differences, in my view, will not result in ideological separation that I am mentioning in my original comment. The error delta is always built in in how we deal with 'honest mistakes'.
b) With regards to:
>"... but it seems like you're again thinking that everything can be known / black and white .."
As I mentioned above, I do not particularly think that I was creating a false dichotomy. If I did, I am sorry, I hope my explanation above made sense.
But I do want to reveal something:
following through to a yes/no state, a binary end -- is something that I tend to think as a 'feature' of my thinking process :-).
I tend to see that my thought 'resolves' into a 'black/white' (binary) end state. While many steps to that might be very much 'gray' (non-binary).
As a personal guide, when I engage in this type of thinking -- I make it an 'axiom', that 'gray areas', eventually have to collapse into binary choices.
This 'eventual-binarity', in my view, is caused by simply
the fact that we either alive or we are not alive.
or,
We either have a partner to create a family with or we do not.
or,
We either have biological progeny, or we do not.. and so on.
So that binary eventuality is built into basics of our existence.
Therefore when thinking about future state, I want it to represent those results.
To reiterate, certainly, there are many 'gray areas' in the steps to that finality of a cycle.
Wars (civil wars) might have many many reason, and they start as 'grey' reasons -- but at the end the brutality of those events revolve around very binary actions.
In my initial comment I suggested that there is a cycle that ends and starts with some sort of serious struggle and tragedy -- between representatives/followers of the 2 mind sets.
The binary choice there -- is that our society gets into that cycle or not.
I have not mentioned what may be ways for us to get out of the cycle, so I hope I did not leave the impression that those can be easily assumed from my comments.
And for some people, both authority and anonymity are tools. Neither is an unqualified good in itself, both have places where they should be affirmed and places where they should be limited.
> Perhaps these two opposite mindsets can not live peacefully in one country forever.
Um, those two mindsets are not a genetic or ethnic heritage; they are personal preferences and temperamental differences that might well distinguish me from other members of my own family. Are you suggesting that if I have a different mindset from my son, one of us would have to emigrate?
WRT, > ".. Um, those two mindsets are not a genetic or ethnic heritage; ..."
Yes, agreed. I do not know if these behaviors are completely 'learned via indoctrination', 'learned via experience', 'enabled by particular character traits' -- or a combination of all those.
Also, even genetic traits can skip generations...
WRT, >"... Are you suggesting that if I have a different mindset from my son, one of us would have to emigrate?..."
Certainly not, I am not suggesting that. I did not even mention a potential solution. One you are suggesting, has not been on my mind at all..
WRT your particular question (parent/son) differences and how dramatic they might be in regards to the 2 mindsets I mentioned above... History tells us -- they can be very very dramatic.
Exhibit [1]:
>"...
In the official narrative Pavlik openly challenged his father and grandfather who hid their wheat from the state at a time when control over the wheat supply was crucial for Soviet Russia. The boy testified in court and filed a complaint against his father. The latter was found guilty on corruption charges and sent to prison. In an act of vengeance, the kulaks from his own family and their sympathizers decided to
..."
Exhibit [2]:
>"...
Son tips off FBI about father attending Capitol riot
..."
>Even Bitcoin has much of the same issues, imagine if the U.S. gov blacklisted your wallet and anyone doing business with a given address would be arrested... the end results would be the same.
This is a widely held view, yet deeply misguided. A bitcoin is a bitcoin. A single account to account transfer means a disconnect & plausible deniability for the recipient.
This claim does not hold up legally.
Just as you earn & are free to use USD that was illegally used at one point.
You can't freely use money that is, on the preponderance of evidence, proceeds of crime. If you ask me that's true of all bitcoin (or rather, all USD that's the proceeds of selling bitcoin), since while there are plenty of speculators moving money around, most of the money coming into the system (i.e. the part that makes the bitcoin price higher than 1/50000 pizzas) is from scams, drug deals, or scam drug deals.
> The current administration in the U.S. was / is considering a tax per mile driven
That's one solution to the problem of carbon/petrol taxes not being viable when cars run on batteries, but still use roads. You either maintain roads usning other tax revenue (meaning non-drivers are subsidizing drivers and there is no incentive to limit road use) or you find another way to fund road maintenance. This isn't exactly an authoritarian surprise nightmare, it's expected and natural.
There's not actually a lot of argumentation on that page concerning the disadvantages of central bank currencies other than fairly generic criticisms like
>"the compelling of economic agents (businesses and individuals) to consume particular goods and services preferred by policy makers;"
which as far as I can tell is already the case anyway through countless of policy tools, same goes for arguments about "cyber hacking" or regulation. It's also not actually a risk from an objective standpoint because that is very much an explicit goal of such a currency.
Also I'm not exactly sure how seriously I'm supposed to take someone who advertises himself as a 'professional economist', but as far as I can tell does not actually work as an economist, has a bachelors degree and no publication history and tries to sell me gold and silver from his dealership on the same page he writes this piece about central bank currency.
>Also I'm not exactly sure how seriously I'm supposed to take someone who advertises himself as a 'professional economist', but as far as I can tell does not actually work as an economist, has a bachelors degree and no publication history and tries to sell me gold and silver from his dealership on the same page he writes this piece about central bank currency.
Presumably an economist who runs a profitable business has demonstrated more economic understanding than the average academic economist, as academic economists don't face any feedback loop that penalises them for bad predictions. As Karl Popper said, a science is only a science when it makes falsifiable predictions that are proven correct.
>Presumably an economist who runs a profitable business has demonstrated more economic understanding than the average academic economist
No, he hasn't demonstrated any understanding of economics the same way a bird doesn't demonstrate understanding of physics just because it can fly. I think you've misunderstood Karl Popper if you took away from his work that selling gold on the internet makes you an economist or a scientist.
Someone could make ten million dollars running an MLM scheme but last time I checked that does not turn you into an authority on macroeconomics.
When I have studied economics, our professor went into long lengths in explanation what makes one an economist.
And the main thing is. To be economist, you have to act in discourse of economics. And discourse of economics is defined by economs.
You don't need any particular profession or education to be economist, just participation in the discourse makes you one. When you are paid to participate, you are professional.
A question is, whether you must participate in research. If yes, you could say that for example economics teacher is not an economist even when they have studied it, they understand it and they teach it. And you could ask the same for 'company economists', CFOs, accountants. They have studied it, they understand it and their main discourse's within of what economists study.
One more thing is. I have met lots of economics grads who had almost no understanding of economics. They learned for tests, then they forgot. A few years after graduation, they remember maybe 5-10%. And I have met lots of amateurs who study, read, think and discuss actively. They might not have a degree and their understanding of economics is superior to a huge percentage of econ grads.
There is a snag, one that Popper didn't understand either, but which makes this all the clearer: predictions are never proven correct in science. They are shown to be "not false within the bounds of statistical and measurement error". So one guy doing well at least shows he is "not wrong", but within arbitrarily large error margins, because he is just one guy and it might all be just a coincidence. Only if you repeat the experiment a sufficient number of times you will arrive at error margins that are not laughably huge.
So the feedback loop doesn't mean anything really, beyond weeding out huge mistakes (huge as in: same magnitude as the error bars). Because it is always just one guy, no numbers, no statistics.
To get back to Popper: Newton's gravity wasn't really proven wrong, it just had its error bars known and explained. Einstein's general relativity is more precise, therefore less wrong and can explain Newtons error bars. But Newton's gravity is still right enough for almost all purposes. So it isn't falsified in Popper's sense, it is refined.
This is a pretty good summary, but I do question what the Fed has to gain from a US digital currency. All of the “rationale” provided here boil down to “so the central banking system doesn’t ‘lose relevance.’” This argument doesn’t make sense to me at all. The Fed controls the supply and policy of money, so perhaps an instant digital currency would help them to implement their policies but is that really a concern of the Fed? This makes it seem like the Fed is worried about Venmo affecting the economy which I doubt it is. Given that the consequences of a shoddy or imperfect implementation would be catastrophic, it seems like something that would take decades of gradual movement.
Looking at the positive benefits, it certainly allows mass distribution of relief funds to citizens much quickly than possible, essentially two-way transactions between government and citizens. In the future, can subsidies (e.g. medical, homeowner) be directly credited to CBDC accounts? Maybe.
In a pandemic like situation, it facilitates mass distribution of relief funds to approved citizens.
On the flip side, in a pandemic like situation, cash allows better off citizens to support their non-citizen friends fnancially from starving, while CBDC prevents citizens from doing that if the government chooses to control how the currency is used using technical mechanisms unique to CBDC.
Judging by the various voter disenfranchisement programs being pushed for, I would expect that dividing line between the eligible and the prevented to be somewhere between one group of citizens and another in some states, too.
I am not convinced governments should ever be trusted with deep and detailed control over what people do with personal levels of money, because we are a still a long way from the ideal of treating all people as created equal.
If vaults are holding wads of paper are gathering dust while everyone is using some others currency else's currency (like the eCNY) over the internet as the global reserve currency, that's a pretty convincing case about the potential for a loss of relevance.
Meanwhile, with regards to feedback on a digital Euro:
> In the light of the views expressed by the citizens during the public consultation, the EDPB stresses that a very high standard of privacy and data protection is crucial to reinforce the trust of end users and shall be considered as a distinctive element in the offering of digital euro, representing a key factor of success of the project.
Footnote 9:
> A thresholded approach could be based on the monetary value of the transaction. For example, low value transaction of less than €1000 could enjoy full privacy as they are unlikely to entail AML high risks. Another possible limitation could cover use outside the Euro area.
If a government wanted, they can use Zero knowledge proofs to provide every citizen with the ability to do say $100k/year in completely anonymous transactions with Monero-like technology.
I think the idea is to set it high enough that not too many people will look, but low enough that after a few decades of inflation (or a few weeks of hyperinflation), it will cover most reasonable transactions, beyond buying a burger.
There's a lot of stuff we buy every now and then between €1,000 and €2,000 (TV, computers, whatever). Not every month but still not something for which we should be scrutinised. Something around €10,000 would be better.
It's a reasonable one I think. Importantly, I make very few (0.1%?) transactions above that limit, so if only all my transactions above that are recorded, it doesn't let anyone paint a picture of my movement, habits and so on.
Most of my transactions above that limit in the past years were recorded in (publicly available!) ledgers anyway: e.g. buying a car or house.
Whether the limit should be €1k or €5k could be debated and you could reach different conclusions in different countries depending on whether that's the cost of an average bicycle or an average home.
The problem with these limits that they are not changed.
When my father worked only a very tiny minority payed the maximum income tax rate (talking for Germany). Nowadays everybody in the upper middle income bracket does.
You could set the amount to a standardized inflation adjusted amount that just happens to be €1K today but would be automatically adjusted unless there is a political not to. Most every number that isn’t a percentage should be defined that way.
At th core I believe this is a new variation of the same problem we have always had -- we need a system for cooperation that is powerful in some ways and yet not restrictive.
I don't think humans have ever had a good solution to that problem. I think technologies like cryptocurrency provide advantages in achieving that. But factions operating in different paradigms (private vs public) are not able to see the benefits or necessities of the other one. And so it's fundamentally a lack of ideological information integration and missing technical solutions.
Humans may not be smart enough to create a good solution to this problem.
A thought experiment. Think back to what life was like 100 years ago, 1000 years ago, back through 10,000 years, then mentally draw a graph with two axis.
On one axis put (potential) individual liberty and anonymity. On the other put health and safety and access to material comfort. I suspect there is an inverse correlation to some degree. 10,000 years ago you could do whatever you wanted, up to and including murder and as long as you were fast enough to escape those seeking revenge you were good. Even 100 years ago you could change your name, move to a different country and start your snake oil business (or whatever) fresh and it would take a long time for justice to catch up. Life was not highly controlled like it is now. There was always a place to flee, always the opportunity to escape. Most people farmed and eked out a living and their hours and activities were dictated by little but the seasons. Not now. You will be at your desk and 9:00 and go home at 5:00 and eat lunch for 1 hour at noon. There are million little rules for everything. We spend all our time following them (or not, but the consequences are more consistent and there is no place left to run).
We accept this trade-off because it enables us to live longer healthier lives with more material comforts. I'd venture a primitive person from 10,000 years ago would scratch their head and wonder why any rational person would do this. Smart phones are a more recent example. Who in their right mind would carry a tracking, listening spying device? Well, anyone who wants instant access to information and a guide to the other side of town, obviously.
Point is this. We give up what we consider liberty for efficiency and this has been going on for thousands of years. These currencies yes will track, yes maybe can only be used for certain things, yes allow a high degree of control. But what if they make the flow of goods and services more efficient? What if they help eliminate ruinous market cycles and depressions and poverty? What if they completely neuter corruption and large scale organized crime? Do we accept them then? Probably we do.
Just to be clear I don't like the idea either. But probably efficiency wins irrespective of my personal biases and life is on the whole "better" for some definition of the word.
Economic ideologies undergo natural selection too. If one population is operating under principles that lead to more efficiency and thus greater production then it will dominate groups operating under less productive ideologies (e.g. the Cold War).
I am not sure that is true. As far as I understand, the communities in most places were small, everyone knew everyone, and people were vary of strangers. You couldn't come to a random village and start farming... and as far as I can tell from family stories, in villages there is basically zero privacy. You need a city with enough people to get some anonymity and liberty of the kind you describe.
To me, the biggest risk of CBDCs and other "smart" money ideas, is potentially mucking with the fungibility of our money. In the book Sapiens, one of the topics is that money is the greatest force unifying humanity, above empires and ideologies. Even the "enemy" North Korean Won has _some_ exchange rate against the US Dollar and other currencies of the world.
If CBDC transactions can be turned off at will or forbidden by region or whatnot, then it might just have no exchange rate, and break the unifying bond of money. I know that there are ways to freeze bank assets or swift transactions, but CBDCs seem much more powerful at this early stage.
I’m not disagreeing with you, but I’m wondering if there have been cases in the past where central banks have broken fungibility based on region or bank assets. The thing that immediately comes to mind are those “HAWAII” federal reserve notes in WWII which were meant to become worthless should Japan have invaded successfully. That never came to pass, but I’m wondering if that historical event is similar to the kind of thing you are talking about?
Exactly, I didn't know about that case but it seems like the rules were presented up front. I think it would only take a few alterations of the deal to panic a smart currency.... And maybe that's why governments won't actually mess with it.
You raise an interesting point. What is the real effect of black market transactions? Is there any positive economic effect? Is fungibility actually necessary, or is it just a quick fix to the problem of value discovery?
I think any kind of CBDC is dead on arrival in the US, for one simple reason: Turbo Tax.
The federal government has all of the information to do everyone's taxes every year, mail you a postcard with the result, and offer you the chance to file an amendment if you disagree. This would make everything much simpler for everyone, and would solve a number of enforcement problems, too. It's a no-brainer.
But Turbo Tax has paid enough money to enough politicians to prevent it from happening, because Turbo Tax makes billions of dollars from the old and broken system.
If the Fed started moving toward a CBDC, and encroaching on the territory now occupied by banks, credit cards, and other entities, the skies would turn black from all of the jets flying lobbyists into Washington to kill that proposal dead.
The Federal Reserve is more powerful than congress. Heck, just saying that makes me sound like a conspiracy nut. But the Fed is supposed to act independently and not be beholden to Congress’ whims.
Congress could have ended the Iraq War, the Afghan War, reined in domestic spying, broken up the banks, passed serious financial and bankruptcy reforms after the '08 crisis or even repealed the ACA. They did exactly none of these things. Why is that, since they have so much power?
Congress has power theoretically, on paper. So does the Monarch in the UK or the National People's Congress or, historically, the Supreme Soviet. But Congress these days rarely exercises real power. Congress is mostly a rubber stamp with some third-rate acting and drama.
The Fed has real power. They started paying interest on reserves in the wake of the financial crisis, and seemed to have no explicit authority to do so. They also started buying much riskier assets than they had before, and also seemed to just so it. They did the various iterations of QE with no real guidance or oversight.
And the Fed controls the money, the lifeblood of any organization. Without the money, Congress does nothing, the president does nothing. That's a lot of power that is frankly unmatched in the US government.
> Congress could have ended the Iraq War, the Afghan War, reined in domestic spying, broken up the banks, passed serious financial and bankruptcy reforms after the '08 crisis or even repealed the ACA. They did exactly none of these things. Why is that, since they have so much power?
Because a majority of Congress (or the supermajority necessary to override a Presidential veto, in the cases where the President was opposed) didn't want to.
On the other hand, they authorized the Afghan War, and the Iraq War, and prevented the President from abandoning the detention facilities at Guatanamo Bay, etc., etc., etc.
Them choosing to exercise powers in ways you don't like, and not choosing to exercise it in ways you do like, doesn't mean they don't have power, it means they have different priorities than you do.
> And the Fed controls the money
No, Congress controls the money. They choose to allow the Fed to exercise some part of that power on their behalf, because their is perceived to be political value in doing so, but the power is entirely Congress’s.
this conspiracy theory is nonsense. plenty of companies that do heavy lobbying still end up killed when the government just says fuck it and does it. the amount they could collect on taxes would massively outweigh the “contributions” of turbo tax and grass root candidates are getting elected more often every day with less financial backing.
The big reason the crypto industry is so big is because:
1) They are inventing crypto for a NO-MONEY-PRINTING currency. This article "forgot" to call out how this is the massive few making the crypto industry huge.
2) "bail ins", negative interest rates are the system STEALING from citizens. Governments could never pull this off from the wealthy or corporations. But they feel entitled to be able to do this to the masses. They don't understand how this won't be tolerated by citizens.
3) Crypto paying ~3% interest will be able to be made sustainable. This is DeFi interest when the deposits can be lent out, with risk nearly fully counterbalanced.
Central banks have no clue how the above three are all that is needed to drive citizens to crypto and minimize their USD/CBDC holdings. The amount of crypto supporters shows that #1, #2 and #3 are getting market adoption today.
To your point about negative interest rates - these have been a real thing for years depending on where you are, but this can be overlooked because banks have generally avoided passing them to everyday users - however if you are a corporate or high net worth client in Europe these are absolutely a thing, eg Credit Suisse charges up to 0.75% on high CHF balances, but pays interest on smaller deposits.
The thrust of the article is that right now private banks effectively manage most of currency circulation and that a digital US dollar would make the Fed a giant 'MegaBank' that managed most of the currency directly in a way, giving them immense control.
Side note: the 'transaction problem' that we have in payment settlements today has nothing to do with the type of currency, it's really just about legacy banks, standards and monopolies. If we wanted a complete transaction to be 50ms it could be that.
Same thing for the 'unbanked' - there's nothing stopping us from having everyone 'banked' right now using the current system. SwissPost I believe is a bank, the USPS could provide basic digital banking as well if you really wanted.
Also understand that most of the financial system is credit, not cash, so there's that.
I think the Orwellian issue is real, as well as the issue with a central government entity getting into such granular problems. I just don't believe they should or can do it.
The banks, which literally own the Fed(s) (they each have set share ownership) ... will also have something to say about it.
It's such a gargantuan change I wonder if it could even ever really happen? How would it roll out? Rhode Island first?
By the time it hits main street I wonder if we'll notice a difference.
All of this is intuitive at first sight. The only question that matters is what powers do central banks have to fight cryptocurrencies? Because they are extremely powerful institutions, and they will fight to the death using every tool they have.
Either you are controlled by the government, or you are controlled by the captilist oligarchs. In a system where capital speaks louder than the people, only a true leftist could see another way out.
There’s another name for a central bank digital currency. It’s called “a bank account at the central bank”. Hardly Orwellian, but hardly innovative either.
Traditional paper money is actually a zero interest bearer bond. Essentially a simple receipt for liabilities at the central bank that can be passed around like an endorsed cheque.
Since regulators have steadily been eliminating the abilities of cheques to act as promissory notes rather than bills of exchange for decades, it’s hardly surprising to see their next assault on the “bearer transfer process” of traditional paper money.
The whole point is to change it from a promissory note to a bill of exchange at the very least.
What would be Orwellian is the need for every citizen to have an account at the central bank to use the monetary system at all. Paper money leave much, much fainter trail of transactions than a centrally mandated and controlled digital currency. It's the pervasive tracking aspect the people find Orwellian.
Not really. Legal tender doesn't generally work like that as a concept. It's largely to do with settling of debts - in that you cannot insist on being paid in cows from somebody who doesn't have any cows. The law will permit the debt to be settled in a defined fungible numeraire and will consider that to end the matter.
But where it does operate like that, that's another example of a public monopoly at work.
You can always contract under the laws of another jurisdiction if it bothers you that much.
As ever it is free as in freedom, not free as in beer. True freedom can be very inconvenient.
These visions for the future are putting a serious strain on my mental health. The average person doesn't care. Not even the more educated. Perhaps I'm the coward, afraid of change. But I really don't see how this much control by those in power can benefit anyone other than themselves.
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[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 262 ms ] threadThe whole speech is worth the read, the synopsis is:
"To conclude, I emphasize three points. First, the U.S. dollar payment system is very good, and it is getting better. Second, the potential benefits of a Federal Reserve CBDC are unclear. Third, developing a CBDC could, I believe, pose considerable risks.
So, our work is cut out for us as we proceed to rigorously evaluate the case for developing a Federal Reserve CBDC. Even if other central banks issue successful CBDCs, we cannot assume that the Federal Reserve should issue a CBDC. The process that Chair Powell recently announced is a genuinely open process without a foregone conclusion, although obviously I think the bar to establishing a U.S. CBDC is a high one. The upcoming discussion paper that constitutes the first step in this process will importantly ask for input from the public. I look forward to reviewing public input on the discussion paper, which will inform the Federal Reserve's ultimate evaluation of a potential CBDC."
Parachute Pants and Central Bank Money, Vice Chair for Supervision Randal K. Quarles at the 113th Annual Utah Bankers Association Convention, Sun Valley, Idaho
08 June 2021, "Central bank digital currency: the quest for minimally invasive technology", https://www.bis.org/publ/work948.htm
> Almost 50 central banks have already launched designs for central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) or prototypes ... The paper discusses ... what they imply for the financial system and the central bank of the future. It sets out the requirements for a “minimally invasive” CBDC design ... digital banknotes that run on “intermediated” or “hybrid” CBDC architectures show promise. Supported with technology to facilitate record-keeping by private sector entities of direct claims on the central bank, their economic design should emphasise the use of the CBDC as medium of exchange.
28 Jan 2021, "FedAccounts: Digital Dollars", https://www.gwlr.org/fedaccounts-digital-dollars/
> Congress should authorize the Federal Reserve to give everyone—individuals, businesses, and institutions—the option to maintain accounts at the central bank. We call these accounts FedAccounts. Unlike the CBDC approaches currently under discussion, which would use complicated and inefficient distributed ledger technology and be walled off from the existing system of money and payments, FedAccounts would be seamlessly interoperable with the mainstream payment system, relying on technologies that the Federal Reserve has used for decades.
No it's not.
Nowhere in the article does it suggest that, nor is it being contemplated in any serious current policy proposals.
It's about having digital cash transactions handled directly via government ledgers rather than via private intermediaries like MasterCard and Visa and PayPal. Which has all sorts of benefits. After all, money is a public good -- why should digital money be handled exclusively by private corporations making a profit off of it?
If government is in charge of printing the physical money people use directly, it's pretty logically consistent for it also to be in charge of digital ledgers in some form as well. We don't let MasterCard and Visa print up their own hundred dollar bills, after all.
And yes, the article absolutely does mention it:
"CBDC Public Policy Rationale
Advocates of CBDCs suggest that they are necessary, certainly useful, in addressing multiple issues emerging across the global financial system of late. These issues include: ...
Zero-lower bound interest rates (i.e., negative interest rates) – the existence of physical cash results in the severe curtailment of the ability of central banks to lower official interest rates below the zero bound (i.e., implement negative nominal interest rates) given the risk that citizens are likely to withdraw from the financial system by hoarding physical cash if negative nominal interest rates are implemented[12]. "
If that's part of the rationale, what do you think is implied about the continuing existence of physical cash?
> The proposal is for a central bank to divide the monetary base into two separate local currencies—cash and electronic money (e-money). E-money would be issued only electronically and would pay the policy rate of interest, and cash would have an exchange rate—the conversion rate—against e-money. This conversion rate is key to the proposal.
So considering they're going to all the trouble of defining an exchange rate, what I think is implied about the continuing existence of physical cash is... that it will continue to exist.
The goal here is very explicitly about making negative interest rates workable, not eliminating cash.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-12-07/cash-ban-law-10000-do...
Make cashless attractive for key businesses (rent, utilities, groceries, the popular things), make cards attractive for consumers and soon enough those paying in cash are automatically assumed to be drug dealers or worse.
Then reduce the number of available banknotes, reduce the maximum denomination and implement whatever tracking you want.
Just don't do it too soon like Germany or people will cling on to their cash. Not that it helps them much.
Now the $100, is worth what a $20 was, 35 years ago.
Eventually it will be worth $5.
With inflation, and time (the long game), all you have to do is wait.
You'll need a duffel bag of hard currency, just to buy groceries.
Some financial institutions may engage in fractional reserve lending, and if an entity can "securitize" or otherwise creatively determine the value of any assets or liabilities, then effectively they are allowed to create their own money.
Money is the substrate of virtually all of society beyond a handful of your peers. If you utterly destroyed it, society would collapse.
If you’re still curious, read Graeber’s “Debt: The First 5000 years” which delves into the Roman monetary system in detail.
Look what happens if you don’t pay your taxes (which is a way to enforce usage of a currency), you’ll be arrested and will go to jail.
And if you think about how the US dollar remained a global reserve currency through the petrodollar (explicitly backed by the US military protecting Saudi Arabia’s oil fields in return to its oil be exclusively sold with dollars), then it’s apparent that guns are what makes the money go round.
Who were Napoleon's financiers? Hitler's? UK during WW2?
It's generally the case that the politicians control the Armies during peacetime, but historically, money is the big limiting factor so banks have incredible power.
> In a room sit three great men, a king, a priest, and a rich man with his gold. Between them stands a sellsword, a little man of common birth and no great mind. Each of the great ones bids him slay the other two. ‘Do it,’ says the king, ‘for I am your lawful ruler.’ ‘Do it,’ says the priest, ‘for I command you in the names of the gods.’ ‘Do it,’ says the rich man, ‘and all this gold shall be yours.’ So tell me—who lives and who dies?
> "The king, the priest, the rich man — who lives and who dies? Who will the swordsman obey? It's a riddle without an answer, or rather, too many answers. All depends on the man with the sword.
> "And yet he is no one," Varys said. "He has neither crown nor gold nor favor of the gods, only a piece of pointed steel."
> "That piece of steel is the power of life and death."
> "Just so … yet if it is the swordsmen who rule us in truth, why do we pretend our kings hold the power? Why should a strong man with a sword ever obey a child king like Joffrey, or a wine-sodden oaf like his father?"
> "Because these child kings and drunken oafs can call other strong men, with other swords."
> "Then these other swordsmen have the true power. Or do they? Whence came their swords? Why do they obey?" Varys smiled.
- A Clash of Kings - Tyrion II
https://acoup.blog/tag/game-of-thrones/
There is a reason why we distinguish between force and power. People generally perform better in societies where they aren't constantly threatened into obedience.
GRRM's world is a lot more cynical and obsessed with raw force than our own historical record.
These should be the first words out of any teacher's mouth in any course in history or civics. It would clear up a lot of confusion built into the vague notions of 'progress'.
"Who needs dollars when you can have Libra?" — Mark Zuckerberg
Truth.
Distribute control of a nation's money, and distribute power more fairly & competitively.
> With cash, we don't know who is using the 100 dollar bill today ... a key difference with CBDC is that the central bank will have absolute control on the rules and regulations that determine the expression of that central bank liability .. also we will have the technology to enforce that ... if an advanced economy issues a CBDC, and someone in a 3rd country wants to use it, it will require the consent of the central bank of the residence of that person, therefore the degree of control will be far bigger.
Video on the IMF site is not working, here's a YT copy (thanks @toomuchtodo): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mVmKN4DSu3g&t=1451s
In a March 2021 speech, Carstens made a similar point, https://www.bis.org/speeches/sp210331.pdf
> It is crucial to trace transactions, particularly large ones, to an individual or entity. For account-based CBDCs, issuing central banks would retain control over cross-border usage. Restricting non-residents’ access reduces the risk of volatile flows, and of currency substitution in recipient economies.
Well-intentioned initiatives like Linux Foundation https://www.goodhealthpass.org/ or EU digital health certificate or Apple iOS 15 digital driver's license (https://www.androidpolice.com/2021/06/07/apples-ios-15-walle...) can all be drafted into the service of CBDC initiatives which require digital identity for digital currency wallets.
Transactional identity is valuable for social credit systems and kill-switch mechanisms.
One LF initiative: https://trustoverip.org/
Before say "your wallet is your account", only sort of. You can have any number of wallets through any number of applications that support it, including rolling your own if you so chose. Certainly nothing like the KYC/AML required of, say, Robinhood.
Here's a list of the big ones on Ethereum:
https://dappradar.com/defi
It's potentially a LOT of power centralized.
I think we can all picture what the moralizing pro-social left and religious right incarnations of that look like.
You don’t really need absolute control of a currency to moralize above-board business.
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WSvb_ZTYS6A
all normal sin taxes still apply.
Do we have taxes on gluttony? sloth? lust? anger? I never noticed.
What we have are taxes and other limitations on health-harming substances, like cigarettes, strong alcohol, and even on excessive sugar in certain places. This is not because the nicotine high, or inebriation, or feeling the sweetness are morally objectionable. This is because inhaled smoke, large quantities of alcohol, and large quantities of sugar lead to health problems, and treating these problems is expensive. It's more like a road tax, higher on heavy vehicles that damage roads faster.
This all assumes that the cost of medical expenses should be socialized.
Were the costs not socialized, there'd be a bit less of a point to tax cigarettes so much: you want to get lung cancer and you are ready to pay for it, go ahead and smoke three packs a day! But this is not how it works today.
A phenomenon which affects a large fraction of a population has effects on the entirety of the population, ergo, it is socialized.
IME few people genuinely care about the poor beyond micromanaging them for their own good or getting them to be out of sight out of mind.
Sin taxes, generally speaking, are how the HN class incentivizes the landscaper class to behave more like them (to varying degrees and with various pretexts as needed per issue).
Currently they are mostly limited by the middle class's ability to exempt itself. Finer targeting will enable them to go hog wild.
This is why initiatives like Decentralised Identifiers are so important. There's simply no government or organisation on the planet responsible enough to wield that power. At least it provides an alternative to centralised behemoths.
https://www.w3.org/TR/did-core/#abstract
Some CBDCs like GNU Taler also have that property. Tokens are signed with blind signatures so the exchange doesn't know the identifier of the tokens you got, just how much of it gave you.
> Stallman has described the program as "designed to be anonymous for the payer, but payees are always identified.
There used to be a rough equilibrium that it was difficult to move large amounts of money around, especially internationally, but small amounts of cash were totally invisible to the state. This ensured a certain amount of stability; the state control could be exercised at the border, where anything of significant value had to be declared to customs, but inside the state you could go about your business. It was pretty difficult for a state to spin up a subversive organisation or competing industry inside another state's borders. Conversely, to commit a large crime required serious planning to move the money, and it was infeasible to move it overseas.
Technology is forcing the dichotomy towards either ubiquitous surveillance of absolutely every transaction, versus increasingly large "perfect" crimes carried out by people who are untouchably overseas.
Apparently not that difficult with the active support of banks (the B in CBDC), https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/jasonleopold/fincen-fil...
> A huge trove of secret government documents reveals for the first time how the giants of Western banking move trillions of dollars in suspicious transactions, enriching themselves and their shareholders while facilitating the work of terrorists, kleptocrats, and drug kingpins. And the US government, despite its vast powers, fails to stop it.
Even criminal convictions have little effect beyond fines, https://wallstreetonparade.com/2020/09/3-count-felon-jpmorga...
> Every American should be horrified by this latest report from the ICIJ; every American should be outraged that the U.S. is now second only to the Cayman Islands for hiding dirty money for criminals.
It's unclear how surveillance of mom & pop CBDC payments could help when trillions of dollars of suspicious Bank activity can continue unabated.
> the US government, despite its vast powers, fails to stop it.
Yes, and so long as it fails to stop it there will be pressure to "do something".
And establishing a threshold below which there is no surveillance is unstable, because immediately you have to face "structuring", and the digital space makes this worse. If there were to be truly free no-surveillance payments of $1, say, people would move a stolen billion as one billion payments of $1. This is already happening with gift cards: https://www.napier.ai/post/prepaid-cards
The truly big money laundering is incredibly difficult to stop, because it can fund its own bribery zone that can extend to entire countries.
I think history builds a case for the answer pretty well. Even criminal groups can't touch the level of mayhem and death caused by the string of overly powerful human rulers of entire countries. Maybe criminal groups just need to grow to compete. Perhaps they are the same in some cases.
However, there is an analog version of financial privacy that totally 100% breaks the chain of digital tracking - cash and gold coins.
IMO, if you oppose financial privacy in digital assets, then it is hypocritical to not advocate for the total ban of cash and gold. I don’t see any way to square this circle. If you still support cash, then you should advocate for some dollar limit under which privacy is OK for crypto.
The very limited number of licit places to translate gold and silver coins into other forms of money are a huge barrier to avoiding tracking.
...I wonder if that explains why there was a coin shortage in the depths of 2020 during the peak of the pandemic, when people were panic-buying lots of stuff? Maybe someone (or lots of people with the same idea) took out a lot of quarters and dimes (which have the same denomination-value-per-unit-weight) from banks with the idea they are untraceable, unlike paper cash.
And nickels and pennies, although heavier for a given total value, actually have a metal melt value about the same as their denomination.
I can totally see why people would panic-buy lots and lots of coins. The whole "people aren't going out to eat as much" argument didn't make sense to me. People panic-hoarding untraceable assets (some with actual metal value that has the added benefit of being inflation-proof, although illegal to actually melt down) does make sense.
How much would it cost to clean a coin so that it won't spread Covid? How much sanitizer, already in short supply, would it consume?
It just wasn't worth it.
https://www.usmint.gov/news/press-releases/statement-on-circ...
"In normal circumstances, retail transactions and coin recyclers return a significant amount of coins to circulation on a daily basis. However, precautions taken to slow the spread of the virus have resulted in reduced retail sales activity and significantly decreased deposits from third-party coin processors, resulting in increased orders for newly minted coins produced by the United States Mint (Mint). Third-party coin processors and retail activity account for the majority of coins put into circulation each year. For example, in 2019, the Mint contributed 17% of newly-minted circulating coins paid into the supply chain, with the remainder coming from third-party coin processors and retail activity.
Simply put, there is an adequate amount of coins in the economy, but the slowed pace of circulation has meant that sufficient quantities of coins are sometimes not readily available where needed. You may be experiencing this in your local communities. We are asking for your help in improving this coin supply issue."
You need more and more Know your customer processes for crypto services because its getting regulated. So wallet addresses are linked to person Id.
Whether gold, Tide bottles (not joking), packs of cigarettes, Amazon gift cards, whatever it is you want to effectively launder.
There are tons of alternatives to cash.
Just saying: it's not a good situation.
That is a... bizarre take on things.
We don't live in a Mad Max dystopia or at the edge of nation-wide starvation. The things I mentioned are normal commodities. No idea why you feel the need to bring prostitution or odd choices like food (which spoils) into it?
People will inevitably circumvent the system if it becomes overregulated. It is still one step closer to Orwellian control for the majority of the population.
Most fundamentally, the USD is backed by the price of oil. The price of everything else is somehow derived from this. The USA's military will probably destroy any country that attempts to sell oil for any other currency. Can you imagine what would happen if someone sells barrels for XMR? The USD would be obsolete in no time.
There is a "Gresham's Law" kind of question here, whether 'better' is actually better.
1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Credit_System
There was a “no comment” denial evidently, for whatever that is worth. Also, hi Isaac.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/pete-buttigieg-sugge...
The same administration (and media) is suggesting making life as hard as possible to not inject yourself with an experimental drug (which never even completed animal testing).
> CNN medical contributor Leana Wen says that life needs to be "hard" for unvaccinated Americans, with "twice weekly testings."
https://twitter.com/disclosetv/status/1414272338800033797
> “Now we need to go to community-by-community, neighborhood-by-neighborhood, and oftentimes, door-to-door — literally knocking on doors — to get help to the remaining people" who need to be vaccinated, Biden said Tuesday.
https://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory/white-house-calling-...
Now, imagine -- they can turn off our finances if you don't comply with exactly what's being suggested. You cannot travel, you must inject yourself with w.e. they want, etc. etc. You must NOT have an abortion if you have X characteristics and you Must have an abortion if you aren't married, etc. Crazy stuff can happen.
In LA they were already shutting off people's water which didn't comply with state orders on the number of people in a home:
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/los-angeles-shut-off-water-powe...
I cannot imagine what would happen to all those people if they attended the party that wasn't state sanctioned. This is super dangerous territory. It's why everyone should be opposed to cryptocurrencies that are centrally controlled and not anonymous.
Even Bitcoin has much of the same issues, imagine if the U.S. gov blacklisted your wallet and anyone doing business with a given address would be arrested... the end results would be the same.
Australia (and to lesser degree Sweden ) are considered to be forerunners, the test-environments for the policies advocated by EU, Left politicians, and global tycoons.
>"... Within days of the COVID-19 outbreak in Australia, most shops began eschewing cash, with a preference for cards. And here’s the thing – most of us quickly complied. Recently, banking experts have said that over the 12 weeks or so that the pandemic was at a crisis point across the nation, the digital banking revolution sped up rapidly, by about five years. ..." [1]
Anonymity brings a way to evade authorities. If authorities are 'bad', anonymity is 'good'.
If authorities are 'good', anonymity is 'bad'.
So for the part of the population that believes in individual rights and ability of an individual to decide what to put into their bodies, how to defense themselves/etc -- the authority is bad.
For the part of the population that trusts pundits, government intelligence agencies, government's health organizations -- the authority is good, therefore anonymity is bad.
Perhaps these two opposite mindsets can not live peacefully in one country forever.
So periodically, they get into a fight, and decides who will claim the victory. The victorious then, will try to erase part of the history that makes them look bad.
And then, the whole cycle will start again. It takes about 5-8 generations. So around 200-300 years years.
It is panful to watch, unnecessary and really bad for humanity -- but it seems like we are not destined to get out of that cycle
There are solution to it, I believe. But neither in western countries, nor globally -- we are going, in the directions of those solutions...
[1] https://www.thebigsmoke.com.au/2020/07/13/the-dark-side-of-a...
Although, I'd argue this cycles every 4 generations (see WWII, civil war, revolution, etc -- they're all fights against a autocracy vs populace), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strauss%E2%80%93Howe_generatio...
> So for the part of the population that believes in individual rights and ability of an individual to decide what to put into their bodies, how to defense themselves/etc -- the authority is bad.
> For the part of the population that trusts pundits, government intelligence agencies, government's health organizations -- the authority is good, therefore anonymity is bad.
Most things are pretty grey - not black & white. So there's not a clear good/bad side. Which is the reason people want personal freedoms and you could want anonymity regardless of how "good" you think your government is.
I agree with you.
1) complexity of science grows every year. It takes a life-time to become infection disease specialist, immunologist, financial guru, constitutional lawyer, environmental scientist.
2) sophistication of deceit also grows with time, if nothing is done (because the reward for the successful deceit grows with time).
3) myself, there is no way I can make my own decisions about complex things. I need pundits, that I can *trust*.
4) but with the growing sophistication of deceit -- how can figure out who to trust?
That's where the division between the two mind sets shows up. Because what's relatively stable throughout the time -- are human character traits...
That division, in turn, later on creates the conflicts every so often -- as I mentioned.
> 4) but with the growing sophistication of deceit -- how can figure out
I agree with you, but it seems like you're again thinking that everything can be known / black and white. The experts disagree on some very important things quite often. So it's not only who to trust - but is that trustable person even correct in their analysis?
This is where personal choice and freedoms and democracy shine.
a) people that do live in a structured society, have to trust somebody. Because one cannot be an expert in everything.
In the sea of deceit, figuring out the 'right pundits, rights representatives' to trust is very very difficult.
Certainly, once a person figures out the 'members-to-trust', then dealing with discrepancies, mistakes, and differences of opinion within that circle -- is somewhat a different matter.
Those differences, in my view, will not result in ideological separation that I am mentioning in my original comment. The error delta is always built in in how we deal with 'honest mistakes'.
b) With regards to: >"... but it seems like you're again thinking that everything can be known / black and white .."
As I mentioned above, I do not particularly think that I was creating a false dichotomy. If I did, I am sorry, I hope my explanation above made sense.
But I do want to reveal something:
following through to a yes/no state, a binary end -- is something that I tend to think as a 'feature' of my thinking process :-).
I tend to see that my thought 'resolves' into a 'black/white' (binary) end state. While many steps to that might be very much 'gray' (non-binary).
As a personal guide, when I engage in this type of thinking -- I make it an 'axiom', that 'gray areas', eventually have to collapse into binary choices.
This 'eventual-binarity', in my view, is caused by simply the fact that we either alive or we are not alive.
or,
We either have a partner to create a family with or we do not.
or,
We either have biological progeny, or we do not.. and so on.
So that binary eventuality is built into basics of our existence.
Therefore when thinking about future state, I want it to represent those results.
To reiterate, certainly, there are many 'gray areas' in the steps to that finality of a cycle.
Wars (civil wars) might have many many reason, and they start as 'grey' reasons -- but at the end the brutality of those events revolve around very binary actions.
In my initial comment I suggested that there is a cycle that ends and starts with some sort of serious struggle and tragedy -- between representatives/followers of the 2 mind sets.
The binary choice there -- is that our society gets into that cycle or not.
I have not mentioned what may be ways for us to get out of the cycle, so I hope I did not leave the impression that those can be easily assumed from my comments.
Um, those two mindsets are not a genetic or ethnic heritage; they are personal preferences and temperamental differences that might well distinguish me from other members of my own family. Are you suggesting that if I have a different mindset from my son, one of us would have to emigrate?
Perhaps not.
Yes, agreed. I do not know if these behaviors are completely 'learned via indoctrination', 'learned via experience', 'enabled by particular character traits' -- or a combination of all those.
Also, even genetic traits can skip generations...
WRT, >"... Are you suggesting that if I have a different mindset from my son, one of us would have to emigrate?..."
Certainly not, I am not suggesting that. I did not even mention a potential solution. One you are suggesting, has not been on my mind at all..
WRT your particular question (parent/son) differences and how dramatic they might be in regards to the 2 mindsets I mentioned above... History tells us -- they can be very very dramatic.
Exhibit [1]:
>"... In the official narrative Pavlik openly challenged his father and grandfather who hid their wheat from the state at a time when control over the wheat supply was crucial for Soviet Russia. The boy testified in court and filed a complaint against his father. The latter was found guilty on corruption charges and sent to prison. In an act of vengeance, the kulaks from his own family and their sympathizers decided to
..."
Exhibit [2]: >"... Son tips off FBI about father attending Capitol riot ..."
[1] https://www.rbth.com/history/329601-demon-or-hero-morozov
[2] https://edition.cnn.com/videos/us/2021/01/23/teen-jackson-re...
This is a widely held view, yet deeply misguided. A bitcoin is a bitcoin. A single account to account transfer means a disconnect & plausible deniability for the recipient.
This claim does not hold up legally.
Just as you earn & are free to use USD that was illegally used at one point.
That's one solution to the problem of carbon/petrol taxes not being viable when cars run on batteries, but still use roads. You either maintain roads usning other tax revenue (meaning non-drivers are subsidizing drivers and there is no incentive to limit road use) or you find another way to fund road maintenance. This isn't exactly an authoritarian surprise nightmare, it's expected and natural.
> [Antivax rambling]
I'll just ignore that part
- https://assets.weforum.org/editor/responsive_large_webp_Fh3F...
- https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2021/01/davos-agenda-digital-...
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/IT-backed_authoritarianism
>"the compelling of economic agents (businesses and individuals) to consume particular goods and services preferred by policy makers;"
which as far as I can tell is already the case anyway through countless of policy tools, same goes for arguments about "cyber hacking" or regulation. It's also not actually a risk from an objective standpoint because that is very much an explicit goal of such a currency.
Also I'm not exactly sure how seriously I'm supposed to take someone who advertises himself as a 'professional economist', but as far as I can tell does not actually work as an economist, has a bachelors degree and no publication history and tries to sell me gold and silver from his dealership on the same page he writes this piece about central bank currency.
Presumably an economist who runs a profitable business has demonstrated more economic understanding than the average academic economist, as academic economists don't face any feedback loop that penalises them for bad predictions. As Karl Popper said, a science is only a science when it makes falsifiable predictions that are proven correct.
No, he hasn't demonstrated any understanding of economics the same way a bird doesn't demonstrate understanding of physics just because it can fly. I think you've misunderstood Karl Popper if you took away from his work that selling gold on the internet makes you an economist or a scientist.
Someone could make ten million dollars running an MLM scheme but last time I checked that does not turn you into an authority on macroeconomics.
And the main thing is. To be economist, you have to act in discourse of economics. And discourse of economics is defined by economs.
You don't need any particular profession or education to be economist, just participation in the discourse makes you one. When you are paid to participate, you are professional.
A question is, whether you must participate in research. If yes, you could say that for example economics teacher is not an economist even when they have studied it, they understand it and they teach it. And you could ask the same for 'company economists', CFOs, accountants. They have studied it, they understand it and their main discourse's within of what economists study.
One more thing is. I have met lots of economics grads who had almost no understanding of economics. They learned for tests, then they forgot. A few years after graduation, they remember maybe 5-10%. And I have met lots of amateurs who study, read, think and discuss actively. They might not have a degree and their understanding of economics is superior to a huge percentage of econ grads.
So the feedback loop doesn't mean anything really, beyond weeding out huge mistakes (huge as in: same magnitude as the error bars). Because it is always just one guy, no numbers, no statistics.
To get back to Popper: Newton's gravity wasn't really proven wrong, it just had its error bars known and explained. Einstein's general relativity is more precise, therefore less wrong and can explain Newtons error bars. But Newton's gravity is still right enough for almost all purposes. So it isn't falsified in Popper's sense, it is refined.
On the flip side, in a pandemic like situation, cash allows better off citizens to support their non-citizen friends fnancially from starving, while CBDC prevents citizens from doing that if the government chooses to control how the currency is used using technical mechanisms unique to CBDC.
Judging by the various voter disenfranchisement programs being pushed for, I would expect that dividing line between the eligible and the prevented to be somewhere between one group of citizens and another in some states, too.
I am not convinced governments should ever be trusted with deep and detailed control over what people do with personal levels of money, because we are a still a long way from the ideal of treating all people as created equal.
Your doubts are correct. They are not. They are worried about cryptocurrencies.
More fundamentally, they are worried about maintaining their status-quo power.
1. that all transactions are no longer left to the honesty of the tax filer to be taxable. There will be a paper trail for the authorities.
> In the light of the views expressed by the citizens during the public consultation, the EDPB stresses that a very high standard of privacy and data protection is crucial to reinforce the trust of end users and shall be considered as a distinctive element in the offering of digital euro, representing a key factor of success of the project.
Footnote 9:
> A thresholded approach could be based on the monetary value of the transaction. For example, low value transaction of less than €1000 could enjoy full privacy as they are unlikely to entail AML high risks. Another possible limitation could cover use outside the Euro area.
* https://edpb.europa.eu/system/files/2021-07/edpb_letter_out_...
* https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27791789
Most of my transactions above that limit in the past years were recorded in (publicly available!) ledgers anyway: e.g. buying a car or house.
Whether the limit should be €1k or €5k could be debated and you could reach different conclusions in different countries depending on whether that's the cost of an average bicycle or an average home.
When my father worked only a very tiny minority payed the maximum income tax rate (talking for Germany). Nowadays everybody in the upper middle income bracket does.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26409174
I don't think humans have ever had a good solution to that problem. I think technologies like cryptocurrency provide advantages in achieving that. But factions operating in different paradigms (private vs public) are not able to see the benefits or necessities of the other one. And so it's fundamentally a lack of ideological information integration and missing technical solutions.
Humans may not be smart enough to create a good solution to this problem.
On one axis put (potential) individual liberty and anonymity. On the other put health and safety and access to material comfort. I suspect there is an inverse correlation to some degree. 10,000 years ago you could do whatever you wanted, up to and including murder and as long as you were fast enough to escape those seeking revenge you were good. Even 100 years ago you could change your name, move to a different country and start your snake oil business (or whatever) fresh and it would take a long time for justice to catch up. Life was not highly controlled like it is now. There was always a place to flee, always the opportunity to escape. Most people farmed and eked out a living and their hours and activities were dictated by little but the seasons. Not now. You will be at your desk and 9:00 and go home at 5:00 and eat lunch for 1 hour at noon. There are million little rules for everything. We spend all our time following them (or not, but the consequences are more consistent and there is no place left to run).
We accept this trade-off because it enables us to live longer healthier lives with more material comforts. I'd venture a primitive person from 10,000 years ago would scratch their head and wonder why any rational person would do this. Smart phones are a more recent example. Who in their right mind would carry a tracking, listening spying device? Well, anyone who wants instant access to information and a guide to the other side of town, obviously.
Point is this. We give up what we consider liberty for efficiency and this has been going on for thousands of years. These currencies yes will track, yes maybe can only be used for certain things, yes allow a high degree of control. But what if they make the flow of goods and services more efficient? What if they help eliminate ruinous market cycles and depressions and poverty? What if they completely neuter corruption and large scale organized crime? Do we accept them then? Probably we do.
Just to be clear I don't like the idea either. But probably efficiency wins irrespective of my personal biases and life is on the whole "better" for some definition of the word.
Economic ideologies undergo natural selection too. If one population is operating under principles that lead to more efficiency and thus greater production then it will dominate groups operating under less productive ideologies (e.g. the Cold War).
Yes, it's true animal in cages live longer than animal in the wild.
Would I prefer to live in the ZOO or in the wild?
If CBDC transactions can be turned off at will or forbidden by region or whatnot, then it might just have no exchange rate, and break the unifying bond of money. I know that there are ways to freeze bank assets or swift transactions, but CBDCs seem much more powerful at this early stage.
The federal government has all of the information to do everyone's taxes every year, mail you a postcard with the result, and offer you the chance to file an amendment if you disagree. This would make everything much simpler for everyone, and would solve a number of enforcement problems, too. It's a no-brainer.
But Turbo Tax has paid enough money to enough politicians to prevent it from happening, because Turbo Tax makes billions of dollars from the old and broken system.
If the Fed started moving toward a CBDC, and encroaching on the territory now occupied by banks, credit cards, and other entities, the skies would turn black from all of the jets flying lobbyists into Washington to kill that proposal dead.
Congress can eliminate the Fed or any and all of its powers at a whim, the reverse is not true. Ipso facto, Congress is more powerful.
The Fed and the myth of its power are a convenient responsibility dodge for Congress, though.
Congress has power theoretically, on paper. So does the Monarch in the UK or the National People's Congress or, historically, the Supreme Soviet. But Congress these days rarely exercises real power. Congress is mostly a rubber stamp with some third-rate acting and drama.
The Fed has real power. They started paying interest on reserves in the wake of the financial crisis, and seemed to have no explicit authority to do so. They also started buying much riskier assets than they had before, and also seemed to just so it. They did the various iterations of QE with no real guidance or oversight.
And the Fed controls the money, the lifeblood of any organization. Without the money, Congress does nothing, the president does nothing. That's a lot of power that is frankly unmatched in the US government.
Because a majority of Congress (or the supermajority necessary to override a Presidential veto, in the cases where the President was opposed) didn't want to.
On the other hand, they authorized the Afghan War, and the Iraq War, and prevented the President from abandoning the detention facilities at Guatanamo Bay, etc., etc., etc.
Them choosing to exercise powers in ways you don't like, and not choosing to exercise it in ways you do like, doesn't mean they don't have power, it means they have different priorities than you do.
> And the Fed controls the money
No, Congress controls the money. They choose to allow the Fed to exercise some part of that power on their behalf, because their is perceived to be political value in doing so, but the power is entirely Congress’s.
1) They are inventing crypto for a NO-MONEY-PRINTING currency. This article "forgot" to call out how this is the massive few making the crypto industry huge.
2) "bail ins", negative interest rates are the system STEALING from citizens. Governments could never pull this off from the wealthy or corporations. But they feel entitled to be able to do this to the masses. They don't understand how this won't be tolerated by citizens.
3) Crypto paying ~3% interest will be able to be made sustainable. This is DeFi interest when the deposits can be lent out, with risk nearly fully counterbalanced.
Central banks have no clue how the above three are all that is needed to drive citizens to crypto and minimize their USD/CBDC holdings. The amount of crypto supporters shows that #1, #2 and #3 are getting market adoption today.
Side note: the 'transaction problem' that we have in payment settlements today has nothing to do with the type of currency, it's really just about legacy banks, standards and monopolies. If we wanted a complete transaction to be 50ms it could be that.
Same thing for the 'unbanked' - there's nothing stopping us from having everyone 'banked' right now using the current system. SwissPost I believe is a bank, the USPS could provide basic digital banking as well if you really wanted.
Also understand that most of the financial system is credit, not cash, so there's that.
I think the Orwellian issue is real, as well as the issue with a central government entity getting into such granular problems. I just don't believe they should or can do it.
The banks, which literally own the Fed(s) (they each have set share ownership) ... will also have something to say about it.
It's such a gargantuan change I wonder if it could even ever really happen? How would it roll out? Rhode Island first?
By the time it hits main street I wonder if we'll notice a difference.
Traditional paper money is actually a zero interest bearer bond. Essentially a simple receipt for liabilities at the central bank that can be passed around like an endorsed cheque.
Since regulators have steadily been eliminating the abilities of cheques to act as promissory notes rather than bills of exchange for decades, it’s hardly surprising to see their next assault on the “bearer transfer process” of traditional paper money.
The whole point is to change it from a promissory note to a bill of exchange at the very least.
If you don't like that, then don't use it - and stand the inconvenience.
In many places, not accepting legal tender is illegal
But where it does operate like that, that's another example of a public monopoly at work.
You can always contract under the laws of another jurisdiction if it bothers you that much.
As ever it is free as in freedom, not free as in beer. True freedom can be very inconvenient.
"don't like a given law in your jurisdiction (county/state/country)? Just move to another one!"
As Argentina found to its cost with dollar bonds issued under English law.