Bitcoin and the Sovereignty of Nations

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2 years ago

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In his bestselling book on the bullish case for Bitcoin, “Bitcoin: Hard Money You Can’t F*ck With”, author Jason Williams makes a candid argument for why Bitcoin will become the world’s preferred reserve currency and asks the following:

Who’s the first to announce a Bitcoin reserve as a legitimate inflation hedge against the dollar? … One day a legitimate nation-state will announce a Bitcoin reserve and it will shock everyone … the first legitimate nation-state to adopt Bitcoin as a reserve asset will reap the rewards.

It’s likely that Williams and many of his readers believed that the open adoption of Bitcoin as a reserve currency by any country was likely still a few years away. After all, it has been less than a year since Microstrategy came out as the first corporation to adopt Bitcoin as its primary treasury reserve asset. And while that practice has been followed by several other corporations around the world, widespread corporate adoption of Bitcoin remains several months, or even several years, away as regulators worldwide continue to warm up to Bitcoin and its immense value proposition.

It likely came as a surprise then to many when El Salvador’s President, Nayib Bukele, announced by special message during the Bitcoin 2021 conference held in Miami Florida, that his nation’s congress would shortly vote on a bill to make Bitcoin legal tender within the country, equal in supremacy with the U.S. Dollar alone (i.e., the only other legal tender within El Salvador). Within days El Salvador’s congress had voted on and passed the Bitcoin bill, forever changing for the better the trajectory of El Salvador and its people and further proving the bull case for Bitcoin as a reserve currency and as a store of value.

Is “Legal Tender” Synonymous with “Reserve Currency”?

A reserve currency is a “large quantity of currency maintained by central banks and other major financial institutions to prepare for investments, transactions, and international debt obligations.” In other words, a reserve currency is held by central banks and financial institutions in order to facilitate all domestic and international transactions performed by the nation’s residents.

Article 8 of El Salvador’s Bitcoin law states the following:

Without prejudice to the actions of the private sector, the State shall provide alternatives that allow the user to carry out transactions in bitcoin and have automatic and instant convertibility from bitcoin to USD if they wish.”

In essence, El Salvador’s government intends to hold sufficient reserves of both bitcoin and the U.S. Dollar to enable instantaneous and frictionless conversions between the two currencies for any market participant who makes such a request.

In order to allow government bodies, corporations, and people within El Salvador to prepare for the new law to take effect, a grace period of 90 days was allowed from the time that the law was passed and published. Given the Central Reserve Bank of El Salvador’s crucial role in facilitating Bitcoin’s status as legal tender and reserve currency, it seems likely that Bitcoin will soon be added to the nation’s currency reserves if it has not already.

What Effect will El Salvador’s Decision have on other Countries?

Game theory kicks in again. The fear of being left behind or losing global dominance. This is no longer just about investors or companies getting rich. It’s about nation-states accumulating power and wealth through bitcoin. No single country can control bitcoin, but they can grow powerful by owning a larger percentage of the supply.

Jason Williams once again shares a prescient understanding of the initial effects of adoption by nation-states of Bitcoin as a reserve currency. Within days of El Salvador’s Bitcoin announcement, politicians in Central and South American countries like Mexico, Brazil, and Panama have announced their support for Bitcoin and their desire to follow in El Salvador’s footsteps.

And it won’t stop there. As El Salvador begins to see the powerful results of adopting a digital-first, anti-inflationary currency like Bitcoin, countries around the world will scramble to add as much Bitcoin to their reserves as they can in a gold rush-like fever.

Why is Bitcoin such a Powerful Reserve Currency?

There are a variety of features that make Bitcoin such a robust currency for all countries, corporations, and people. I’ll touch on a pair of the most important below.

Autonomous and Decentralized

Fiat, or government-issued, currencies all suffer from the same problem: they are controlled by whatever party or politician happens to be in power at any given time. The centralized government has all power to decide the supply and value of its currency at any given time, as well as who is able to use the currency and who will have their assets frozen (i.e., made inaccessible) if they choose to disagree with or go against the government.

Bitcoin, on the other hand, is open to anyone and is not governed by any centralized entity. Bitcoin is governed entirely by its users, who are spread around the world and who share a wide range of competing ideals and priorities. Bitcoin’s users want to see it succeed and understand that it must be free of government or corporate oversight in order to realize its full potential.

Since Bitcoin cannot be controlled by any centralized group, a nation that adopts Bitcoin as its reserve currency is resistant to overreach by powerful countries like the U.S. and China or powerful organizations like the IMF (International Monetary Fund) that would attempt to subjugate a Bitcoin-centric nation through sanctions, tariffs, and the like. Bitcoin levels the playing field for all nations and all nations must follow the rules established by the Bitcoin network.

Resistant to Inflation and Money Printing

One of the greatest powers maintained by governments who produce and manage the world’s fiat currencies is the ability to appropriate wealth through money printing from those who hold the currency. When governments print money through policies like quantitative easing and purchases of corporate debt by Central Banks, that money is not shared equally with everyone who holds that government’s currency or assets denominated in the currency. Let’s take two recent examples:

  • Throughout 2020 and 2021, the U.S. government handed out hundreds of billions in U.S. dollars to a subset of its citizens and companies through stimulus payments and programs to combat the effects of the coronavirus pandemic. The benefits of the stimulus packages were not shared equally among all U.S. citizens and organizations, and almost none of the benefits were shared with other nations, most of which hold U.S. dollars in their reserves and their bank accounts since the U.S. dollar currently operates as the de facto global currency. In other words, the U.S. appropriated the wealth of nations around the world in order to finance its own pandemic response.

  • As part of the U.S.’ coronavirus relief bill passed in December 2020, $89 million was set aside for “maintenance and purchase of furniture for Senate buildings”. The vast majority of people throughout the U.S. and the world will never have an opportunity to even set foot in the Senate buildings, let alone use the furniture. However, thanks to the powers afforded by fiat currency, we all participated in paying for it.

The innate beauty of Bitcoin can be observed within its monetary policy. Only 21 million Bitcoin can or will ever exist in the world. No government can introduce extra Bitcoin into the system to finance its spending and no company can mine extra Bitcoin in order to improve its fortunes. Bitcoin’s monetary policy can only be changed through consensus of its user base. And why would Bitcoin’s users ever choose to devalue their own wealth? They wouldn’t and so Bitcoin’s monetary policy remains completely unchanged after more than a decade since the Bitcoin network first started.

Bitcoin Gives Sovereignty Back to its Users

Sovereignty is defined as “supreme power or authority.” Throughout almost all of recorded history, the sovereignty of nations and of people has been controlled by the person or group who had the largest army or who had the greatest control over the money supply.

Armies cannot be easily funded with Bitcoin because Bitcoin cannot be printed. And control of Bitcoin’s money supply rests solely with those who use and support the network. Bitcoin is perhaps the greatest expression of self-sovereignty that the world has ever known. People, corporations, and nations around the world will continue to use Bitcoin to wrest control of their lives back from those who seek to take it. It is up to each of us to determine how and where Bitcoin can have an impact in our lives.

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2 years ago

Comments

Bitcoin will give Sovereignty back to the states because if they all follow El Salvador's legal tender law pretty soon every other country will make custodian services legal tender. In El Salvador, the citizens will be forced to use custodian services like Strike and Wallet of Satoshi to receive and send funds, and the state will provide a frictionless system to exchange from BTC to USD and the other way around.

Since the law makes no distinction between a real Bitcoin transaction, a lightning network transaction, or a custodian transaction pretty soon the government of El Salvador will be printing Bitcoin to its citizens.

The usage of a custodian service to settle the transaction and the participation of the state to provide liquidity only means president Bukele is going to print Bitcoin to his citizens. And that nearly printed Bitcoin will be accepted as the real deal at least inside El Salvador and Strike will pretend that is sending Bitcoin to its users but since transactions are not on-chain and only on a private leger those transactions can be just printed Bitcoin.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

The Bitcoin law doesn’t require El Salvador’s citizens to use a centralized service or custodian. They can send their transactions directly over the blockchain if they want.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

Okay, the government will provide the possibility to convert your satoshis into USD only if you use theirs preferred custodian service which will be Strike. If you don't use Strike as your primary app you will have to use LN to exchange into any other asset using regular LN exchanges. But if you want to use Bitcoin and convert that into dollars you will have to use whatever application the government will use to convert your balance for dollars.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

Converting to USD solely through the government also isn’t required by the Bitcoin law. The government is required to provide that service, but it doesn’t say anywhere that citizens can’t convert between the two currencies elsewhere (e.g., peer-to-peer, throughs dexs or cexs, etc.).

$ 0.01
2 years ago

Citizens will find out pretty soon that using Bitcoin outside the Strike app is too expensive so they will be forced because of the fees to only use custodian services, and the government will implement their exchange service probably to the same custodian they are already using which is Strike app.

For the law in El Salvador even if Strike prints Bitcoin it will still be recognized as a Bitcoin payment. Unfortunately, Salvadorians will be forced into using custodian services always especially if they don't have the money to pay for on-chain costs.

A custodian will offer the exchange into USD somehow, but also they would be able to exchange into other assets using LN exchanges like fixedfloat and coinplaza.

The truth is that the Bitcoin law in El Salvador is nothing more than making custodian services legal tender, alone with on-chain Bitcoin if users have the money to pay for the transaction fee that is.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

People who value having transactions directly written on the blockchain will pay for that.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

In El Salvador since they are poor too many will not have other choices but to be forced into using custodian services. That means that such custodian will have the possibility of running a fractional reserve scheme banking service because very few will actually be able to verify funds. Those smart enough will either convert right away into dollars or other altcoins using LN exchange.

Otherwise they risk having printed Bitcoin in their account.

$ 0.00
2 years ago