Part 3: How Bitcoin Fixes Money with Lyn Alden

SHOW NOTES: Lyn Alden is a macroeconomist and investment strategist. This interview is the final of three shows where we discuss Lyn’s amazing new book: Broken Money. In this show, we recap the flaws in the modern financial system, and then we discuss the potential of Bitcoin as a decentralized solution with its ability to allow hard asset money to move globally at speed. THIS EPISODE’S SPONSORS: Iris Energy - Wasabi - Ledger - Unchained - SUPPORT THE SHOW: → Become a Patron: → Subscribe on iTunes → Leave a review on iTunes → Share the show out with your friends and family on social media → Drop me a line on hello@ → TIMESTAMPS: 00:00:00 Introduction 00:02:44 Bitcoin Fixes This 00:12:35 Broken money effects 00:19:06 The Pillars of Bitcoin 00:30:20 Bitcoin’s long-term impacts 00:40:02 Risks to Bitcoin; CBDCs WHERE TO FIND THE SHOW: → My website: → iTunes: → Spotify: → Stitcher: → SoundCloud: → YouTube: → TuneIn: LISTEN TO OLD EPISODES: → By guest: → By topic: → Transcriptions: WHERE TO FOLLOW ME: → Twitter: → Medium: @whatbitcoindid/ → Instagram: → Facebook: → YouTube: → Website: → Email list: LEARN ABOUT BITCOIN: → Step by Step Guide: → Training: → Resources: #Bitcoin #Finance #Economics **** “As the first time where hard asset, bearer asset money can move at the speed of telecommunications globally…it’s one of the first technologies in money that can improve it that’s not centralising, it’s arguably decentralising, and that’s what makes it different from than the past 200 years of monetary innovations.” — Lyn Alden - - - - It is becoming increasingly clear, even to people without expertise in monetary or fiscal matters, that the current economic system is in need of urgent reform. The money supply continues to inflate, rewarding large, well-connected entities at the expense of smaller ones, with liabilities shifting from the private to the public sector. At the state level, many countries are facing serious challenges in accumulating capital and making global payments. In short, money is broken. At a more fundamental level, there are serious technical limitations with current forms of money. Humans have been trying to make gold and silver easier to use for thousands of years, leading to the development of various banking tools. However, the increasing level of abstraction in these tools has caused major issues, especially with the rise of telecommunications. This has led to the current system where physical money is too slow for the modern global economy. Bitcoin is a potential solution to all these issues. It is different from previous monetary innovations as it allows hard asset money to move globally at the speed of digital communications, which could revolutionise the financial system. It is unsurprising that it has emerged at the end of the long-term debt cycle, as an innovation that unified various technical concepts developed over previous decades, with the aim of creating a form of money suitable for the digital age. But perhaps more important than the technical aspects of Bitcoin is the rigid and predictable monetary policy, which consists of two simple rules: a fixed limit of 21 million coins and a halving of the inflation rate every 210,000 blocks (approximately every four years). Its decentralised nature protects this monetary policy from being corrupted. This simplicity contrasts starkly with the complex and convoluted monetary policies of central banks and governments. Bitcoin therefore offers a global, decentralised ledger that allows for easy cross-border transactions and protects against debasement. Whilst its advantages are more immediately obvious to the people and governments in developing countries, Bitcoin’s importance extends to all people and all countries. There are always risks to Bitcoin that the community needs to be prepared for, so it is vital to educate people about Bitcoin and its long-term potential.
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