If you don't change the way money is issued and distributed, you change nothing. Cryptocurrencies - and not necessarily blockchain-based cryptos - have the potential to play a role in fundamentally changing the way "money" is issued and distributed, but this potential has been squandered in the Gold-Rush Greed of speculative schemes which depend on a greater fool volunteering to be the bagholder for an intrinsically utility-free (i.e. of no productive utility) speculative vehicle.
Swapping one set of extractive billionaires for another set of extractive billionaires doesn't improve the world. Swapping billionaires changes nothing.
Once
you grasp the potential of community-based labor-backed
cryptos, you realize cryptos took the greed-soaked path to
the Dark Side of a destructive asymmetry of wealth and power:
those who issued blockchain cryptos (in all their forms) would become
the new Extractive Elite, the new Power Elite, the New Parasitic
Elite, buying the wealth generated by the labor of others for
peanuts.
Scrape away the high-falutin rhetoric, and
blockchain/crypto distills down to the same old greed and avarice
that powers traditional finance: those who own the mines gain
wealth from the issuance of "money" and its proxy, credit,
and those who control the spigots of "money" and credit
then buy control of governance, labor and the productive assets that
generate real-world wealth.
Whether the "money" is
metals that labor extracts to the benefit of the mine owners, cryptos
issued to the benefit of miners and insiders, or fiat currencies
issued (or borrowed into existence) by central banks and private
banks, the principle is the same: the few who control the "money"
issuance spigots benefit at the expense of the laboring many.
As
for the much-touted institutional participation:
It's just another greed-driven rush to front-run the next gold rush.
The tech bubbles have shown that early adopters mint billions,
and so Pavlov's Institutional Managers all piled into blockchain and
crypto schemes, no matter how flimsy and lacking in real-world
utility, desperate to secure early equity rounds in what the
institutions see as the next gold rush.
The early
mine claims got rich, everyone who came later got the shaft. As
Mark Twain so entertainingly described, fortunes were made and lost
with no relation to the actual prospects of the mining claims being
traded.
As for the claims of widespread utility of
blockchain and crypto, all the claims are strained. Compare the
rapid global distribution of mass produced spectacles lenses from
Venice in the 1400s (glasses quickly reached Imperial China) with the
supposed utility of blockchain and crypto: truly world-changing
innovations that improve human life spread quickly. Where are the
blockchain and crypto "innovations" that so improve human
life that they've spread globally in a few years? There aren't any.
Scrape away the speculative frenzy, the search for greater
fools and the gold-rush mob of greed-driven Pavlovian
Institutions, and what's left? If anything was truly
world-changing in terms of improving human life, it would already be
tracking the World Wide Web's expansion, and several billion people
would already be using blockchain and crypto utilities due to their
vast practical advantages over previous utilities.
The
truly world-changing opportunities to improve human life with cryptos
don't enrich the issuers of the currencies or the early
investors: they are distributed to those who are
performing useful work in their communities rather than speculating.
There are three false assumptions at the heart of
blockchain/crypto:
1. We can all get stupidly rich
while changing the world for the better. (The Internet model)
2. Blockchain/crypto is "open to everyone"
because anyone earning fiat currency can use that to buy crypto.
Getting stupidly rich from being an early investor and
front-running speculative bubbles doesn't change the world.
Confusing getting rich with "changing the world" doesn't
change the world.
As for "democratizing finance:"
those without capital and no way to save up appreciable capital are
left out of speculative assets. The already-wealthy have the
means to jump on the bandwagon and so they end up owning the lion's
share of the new hot asset.
In this way, cryptos are no
different from all the other asset classes dominated by the
already-wealthy. A relative handful of early investors and
issuers of cryptos became billionaires, the already-wealthy piled in
and the bottom 90% were left to trade high-priced crumbs.
3.
Fixing finance will fix the world. Just as those holding hammers
see nails that can be pounded down, those steeped in the abstract
world of speculation and finance think their expertise in making
"money" is all that's needed to fix whatever is broken in
the world.
The reality is that finance has broken the
world's ability to adapt by pushing wealth-power inequality to
extremes that are breaking down economies and societies. Finance
looks at scarcities - artificially created by cartels and monopolies,
or the real-world scarcities of depletion - as "opportunities"
for profiteering. Governance and regulation are "opportunities"
to distort public policy to benefit the few at the expense of the
public good.
This is the ultimate fantasy of financiers of
any stripe: I'm gonna do good while getting stupidly rich. But
"doing good" quickly slides into the swamp of good
intentions and glossy fantasies. The reality is greed and the desire
for unearned wealth drives people to arrive to do good and stay
to do well.
The reality is financiers hope to "change
their world" by getting rich, and it's easy to cloak this
self-interest with noble-sounding goals and claims and persuade
oneself that getting rich via speculation will magically ennoble the
world. It won't.
You want to fix the world with finance? Then
fix this: wages' share of a financialized, globalized,
speculative-bubble dependent economy have been falling for decades.
Fix this and you really will change the world. Anything less changes
nothing.
by Charles Hugh Smith from the November 14, 2022 blog at oftwominds.com
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