Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The political implications of bitcoin
The political implications of bitcoin
May 1, 2026 2:37 PM

Prior to the publication of John Maynard Keynes’ The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money, balanced budgets reflected the received wisdom for governments.

By making the case for debt spending in times of recession (and the virtually ignored case for restricting spending in times of growth), Keynes gave political leaders a license to abandon the requirement of balance. Now, they could spend beyond their means and still claim to be responsible. Declining purchasing power over time attests to the impact massive deficit spending has had on currency. But as long as leaders avoid banana-republic style breakdowns, the public tends to accept the diffuse impact of weakening dollars. The effect is slow, incremental, and generally not noticeable other than over longer time periods.

Though it twists Keynes’ theory to turn him into an apologist for permanent debt spending, the simple fact remains that his work reinforced a continuing threat to the soundness of currency. In an era of fiat currency, gold has been the purported safe haven for those who want a solid asset. Gold is not just beautiful. It has a wide variety of uses and possesses the advantage of scarcity. It must be mined. There is a finite amount available. However, there are problems with gold, too. One doesn’t want to have to maintain a physical supply of it. It is also difficult to make electronic exchanges using gold as money. In addition, governments have sometimes been heavy-handed in the regulation of gold.

Enter bitcoin. Bitcoin is an attempt to get beyond the weakness of fiat currency through the use of technology. By puting power to plex mathematical equations, the technically astute can “mine” bitcoin. The critical point is that there will be a finite supply of bitcoin. Governments will not be able to create bitcoin. They cannot increase the supply by printing or changing reserve requirements through a central bank.

At least for now, bitcoin also presents the opportunity to avoid regulation of transactions. Currently, for instance, all transactions over $10,000 have to be reported to the federal government. As inflation slowly eats away the dollar’s value, more and more e into reporting range. For this reason, bitcoin has also been attractive to those who wish to operate beyond the notice of governments. Some of the more sensational accounts have included the use of bitcoin to purchase sex, drugs, or even murder.

It would appear that bitcoin represents a classic Silicon-Valley style “disruption” of the government’s monopoly on currency. (1) Government devalues currency through excessive printing or debt. (2) The devaluation creates an opening in the “market” for money. (3) Technologists create a new electronic form of money that can’t be diluted by governments.( 4) Governments continue to pay their obligations in a fiat currency that es increasingly irrelevant. (5) The only people using government currency are federal/state/local workers and welfare/social insurance recipients. (6) Users of government currency will only be able to buy inferior goods. (7) Those who wish to operate on a true market level in their transactional life simply exchange bitcoin. (8) Fiat currency faces the steady decline of city medallion-cabs in the era of Uber.

To read the above scenario is to see that the future may not be bright for bitcoin and other crypto-currencies. Governments have a tremendous interest in preserving their monopolies on currency. Without it, they will e less effective and their reach will decline. It seems to me that the logical course for states will be to outlaw the use of bitcoin or to regulate it so heavily as to radically diminish its value. In the meantime, I suspect state actors are playing a “wait and see” kind of game so as to avoid using coercive strategies before it is clear they are necessary.

The other tack for governments to take would be to return to balanced budgets and to maintain fiscal discipline. They pete with bitcoin by utilizing people’s strong attachment to state currency and protecting value by avoiding debt and printing.

But I think it is safer to assume governments will begin to crack down on bitcoin if it really gets going.

Image: Public Domain

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Dave Ramsey, Christian witness, and the morality of markets
When the financial guru justified raising rents on his properties to “market rates,” even if it meant some tenants might have to hit the bricks, a lot of people asked what was more important to him: God or mammon. But was that fair? Read More… The tweet heard ’round the world last week involved a clip of Dave Ramsey arguing that a Christian landlord can, ethically, raise rents to market levels even if it means that the renter has to...
Elizabeth Holmes is the con artist we were all waiting for
Her promise of a magical technology that would transform healthcare proved a lie, but why were so many smart, plished investors willing to believe it? Read More… Elizabeth Holmes has been found guilty on four of 11 federal charges of wire fraud and conspiracy, after promising revolutionary blood test technology from her corporation, Theranos. The promised disruption was something people desperately wanted and still want: cheap, quick blood tests, requiring only a finger drop of blood. In reality, the corporation...
Spider-Man: No Way Home offers a multiverse of redemption instead of revenge
Needless to say, spoiler alerts galore! Read More… In superhero movies, it’s a given that the good guys will try to save innocents from the bad guys. Sometimes they save individuals, sometimes they save cities, and all too often—especially in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)—they save the entire planet or, increasingly, the entire universe. (Once you’ve raised the stakes so high and swatted them back down, every subsequent threat on that scale seems less threatening because more unreal.) But what...
The weight of sin: C.S. Lewis’ The Great Divorce has been adapted for the stage
If you thought good and evil were superstitious binaries that will one day be married, a new theatrical adaptation of Lewis’ parable will have you pining for a divorce. Read More… Humans are incredibly skilled at rationalizing sin. We prefer to gloss over sin rather than face it. And for good reason! To grapple with the true weight of our sin is a heavy burden indeed. And even when we do recognize sin, we are more likely to note the...
Peter Bogdanovich left behind one last cinematic gem
If you haven’t seen “She’s Funny That Way,” and you probably haven’t, then you’re in for both a treat and a retreat into the world of Old Hollywood farce in the spirit of Sturges and Lubitsch. Read More… Peter Bogdanovich has died, America’s only famous chronicler of Old Hollywood, a young friend of Orson Welles and an admirer of John Ford, and a director in his own turn of celebrated dramas like The Last Picture Show (1971), ing-of-age story about...
Remembering Latin America’s knight of freedom
A signal force in bringing market economics and limited government ideas to Latin America, Ramón P. Díaz’s legacy offers hope for a continent sinking into a mire of socialism and authoritarianism. Read More… January 7, 2022, marks the fifth anniversary of the death of a man who played a major role in spreading throughout Latin America the key ideas that underpin the free society. Intellectual, lawyer, journalist, economist, university professor, and public servant, Ramón P. Díaz (1926–2017) has good claim...
A Lutheran bishop faces prosecution for teaching traditional Christian doctrine
The following is an edited-for-length version of the lecture delivered by the Rev. Dr. Juhana Pohjola, bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Mission Diocese of Finland, as part of the 2021 American Lecture Tour sponsored by the International Lutheran Council. Read More… On April 29, 2021, the prosecutor general of Finland decided to bring charges against me and Member of Parliament Mrs. Päivi Räsänen. We will be summoned to the Helsinki district court for the court session on January 24, 2022....
Today is Lord Acton’s 188th birthday. His philosophy should guide our next two centuries
Acton’s vision is the liberal vision, a vision of a society that is beyond the state. It sees individual souls above the state and that God rules it all through his providence. Acton’s vision is still worth defending and offers hope to us now in thesepolarizedand troubled times. Read More… Today, January 10, 2022, is Lord Acton’s 188th birthday. This difficult era ofa global pandemic,a crisis in institutions, andcivil unrestseems a strange time to look back on the life and...
Jimmy Lai ranked No. 1 on press freedom coalition’s “10 Most Urgent” list
Imprisoned entrepreneur, publisher, and pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai has been highlighted as the most urgent case when es to threats to press freedom in China, this as the world is about to focus on Beijing for the 2022 Winter Olympics. Read More… Every month, the One Free Press Coalition issues its “10 Most Urgent” list, ranking the most harrowing challenges to press freedom from around the world in order of urgency. Jimmy Lai, a 74-year-old Hong Kong entrepreneur and pro-democracy...
Bob Dole left a legacy of civility and cooperation that is sorely needed today
The severe ideological divide that makes even debate impossible can only be bridged by a return to civility in dispute. Strong opinions civilly expressed is the best first step. Read More… One of the sadder deaths in 2021 was that of former Kansas senator Bob Dole. Wounded war-hero and long-serving politician, Dole was widely respected from people across the political spectrum not only for his skills but also for his willingness to try and work across divides to mon objectives....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved