Tascha Profile picture
Mar 20 44 tweets 8 min read
What is money? Will crypto change money?

Some controversial opinions:
World has more types of money than any point in history— 164 government currencies plus gold, silver, CDs, repos, treasuries & numerous other quasi-money. If we count crypto tokens, types of money are literally exploding.
Money is going through some serious change. B/f we talk abt where it’s headed, let’s 1st look at how it became what it is today.

3 perspectives on what money is that I find esp helpful:
1. Money as a technology for mass economic collaboration

In case not obvious, money is a tool for transacting among strangers. When you lived in a Mesopotamian village where all 50 people in village were related, money was useless.
Exchanges in micro economies typically operate as gift systems— you gift your cousin 5 apples today, he gifts you 5 peaches tomorrow. Your shared social graph keeps gifting reciprocal & fair through mutual trust.
Money becomes useful when you venture to trade w/ folks from far-away villages whom you may never see again & trust runs thin. Money or currency operates as a neutral, real-time database of values to be exchanged.
(sidenote: ’Tis why your sister thanks you for gifting her microwavable slippers that she doesn’t need at X’mas, but will feel insulted if you ‘gift’ her a $50 bill instead. Subconsciously our ancestral tribal part of brain still tells us ‘money = treated like strangers’.)
Money solves the problem of transacting w/o trust, as long as you & strangers both agree to use the same money— e.g. gold, copper rods, clothes, seashells— to track values.
From this lens it’s easy to see money is both a result & an enabler of commerce expansion— the more we trade w/ strangers, the more we need money. It’s no wonder that post-war period of sweeping globalization in production & commerce also saw max expansion in broad money.
World money supply— which mirrors demand for money— grew from 50% of GDP to over 140% since 1960s. If you count in various forms of quasi-money, the number at least doubles.
Still, scope of cooperation among strangers is limited by scope of social agreement on a particular money— if you & your counterpart don’t agree on which money should be used or amount of value it represents, collaboration fails.
Traditionally, getting different "villages" to agree on using same type of money is a near-impossible political challenge. Just look at how hard it was to get Euro off ground & troubles that followed.
But borderless blockchain tokens seem to achieve this feat effortlessly. More on this in a sec.
2. Money as an efficient credit tracking system

In modern economy, relationship btw money & credit has become like air & wind— credit creation IS money creation. It wasn’t always the case.
End of day, credit is just a mechanism to allow time delay in value exchanges. In simple economies credits don’t need money to exist. Members of small society can keep tabs on—i.e. extend credit to—one another. You have tabs open w/ your local bakery, bar, & butcher shop, etc.
Those are original forms of credits, which we now call supplier financing.

Problem w/ credit system like that is it can’t scale— each producer/vendor has to run their own IOU databases that don’t talk to one another. Credits are segmented & kept small.
Money puts credits on steroids. Not only does it make credits from different sources share common units & thus interchangeable, it also gets rid of need for borrowers to deal w/ numerous creditors & pools lendable resources of society together at entities called banks.
The result is bigger, faster credit creation at lower transaction cost.
From this lens it’s easy to see that entities who’re most in need of credits would also be the biggest proponents of the “adoption” of money, esp when they also are the ones controlling the supply of said money.

Who’re those entities? You guessed it, governments.
Modern paper money as we know it began 300 yrs ago w/ birth of Bank of England, as a way to finance—i.e. extend credit to—British gov’s war vs France. (Now every crypto project runs that same playbook that used to be a government privilege. Talk abt democratization of finance!)
Government is usually biggest borrower in any economy. It’s no wonder that fast growth of broad money in past decades is accompanied by large increase in gov borrowing…
(And if you think lines in above chart have gone up a lot, adding countries like Japan into the mix puts things in perspective:)
…meanwhile credits to private sector has increased a lot, too, but arguably less, esp since the 90s.
How sustainable is the global run-up of credit, i.e. debt, is a debate for another day. My point here is money is the key enabler of credit creation at scale, w/o which we wouldn’t have a global mkt economy of the size it is today.
W/ private crypto tokens & other digital assets becoming increasingly money-like, global money supply is only going to further grow. What it means for credit growth seems obvious. More on this in a sec.
3. Money as unexercised claim on economic output

“Unexercised” is keyword here. Most of us think “money = purchasing power”, i.e. it allows you to claim a slice of economic pie of society. But on aggregate level it doesn’t quite hold up.
As we talked abt, world broad money stock is over 140% of world GDP. That means hypothetically if all holders of money globally are to “cash out” at once to exchange for goods & services, we don’t have enough GDP to go ‘round to fulfill all claims.
To put another way, purchasing power the world thinks it has is 40% higher than what it actually has. We’ve been collectively over-imagining our purchasing power since 2008, when world money/GDP ratio crossed 100%.
Before you shout “Ponzi scheme!” or “Evil governments printing too much!”, it’s more likely that we’re actually witnessing a shift in the nature of money & credit, which will only be accelerated w/ crypto & tokenization.
W/ these 3 perspectives on money in mind, how should we think abt ways crypto/blockchain may change money, credit & economy?
(BTW, like this so far? I write about ideas on investment, macro and human potential. Subscribe to my newsletter for updates 👉 taschalabs.com/newsletter.)
A few possibilities to note:

1. Much, much higher money supply

Assets become quasi-money when they’re liquid & easy to transact. Blockchain is making a great number of assets more liquid—> candidates for quasi-money grow a lot—> de-facto money supply explodes.
A friend from Philippines sent me this pic. You can now pay taxi drivers w/ BTC, ETH, SLP, etc. It’s only getting started.
2. Higher credit & debt, but more distributed

Money to credit is like air to wind, remember? We already live in a world where everyone’s both a debtor & a creditor & everyone owes everyone something.
W/ blockchain you can take out a loan in seconds + collaterals are easily managed on-chain —> Credit & debt levels will go to new heights.
Distribution will also change. Rich people take on more debt rn b/c poor people don’t have collaterals. W/ tokenization of everything, everyone will have something on-chain to use as collateral—> massive democratization of credit & debt are in the cards.
We’ll see gross claims on economic output in accounting sense far exceeding actual economic output. Credit cycle boom/bust will be more often & more violent. But hopefully since it’s all managed on-chain, things will clean up quickly, too.
3. Less stable inflation

W/ influx of private quasi-money, governments will have harder time managing total money supply & inflation.
It may be true that demographic change & productivity gain from exponential tech are deflationary in long run. But large & growing de-facto money supply would be a powerful countervailing force to that.
4. Borderless money—> economic collaboration on global scale

Money allows trust-less collaboration among strangers—> if money goes borderless, so will be the scope of collaboration in production activities.
Globalization in physical economy may well be shrinking in next 2 decades b/c of re-shoring of supply chain & geopolitics. But opposite will happen in digital economy. Crypto reduces cost of cross-border exchanges to nothing. Metaverse means max globalization.
5. More synchronized global business cycles

’Tis a direct result of #4. A digital economy w/o border means you share same business cycle no matter where you are. And as digital’s share in total economy grows, biz cycles across physical countries will be more in sync as well.
There’s so much more we need to talk about, but gotta start packing for @avalancheavax Barcelona as plane leaves in a few. Bye now!
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