Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

I spoke at a big bitcoin-adjacent company this week and one of the best questions was from someone who asked what the downsides of bitcoin adoption might be.

I always do appreciate these steelman questions, the skeptical questions, the ones where we challenge ourselves. Only when we can answer those types of questions do we understand the concept that we are promoting.

So the classic example is that in modern economic literature, "deflation is bad". This, however, is only the case in a highly indebted system. Normally, deflation is good. Money appreciates, technology improves, and goods and services get cheaper over time as they should. Price of Tomorrow covers this well. My book touches on this too, etc. The "deflation is bad" meme is still alive in modern economic discourse and thus is worth countering, but I think in the bitcoin spectrum of communities, people get that deflation is fine and good.

My answer to the question was in two parts.

The first part was technological determinism. In other words, if we were to re-run humanity multiple times, there are certain rare accidents that might not replicate, and other commonalities that probably would. Much like steam engines, internal combustion engines, electricity, and nuclear power, I think a decentralized network of money is something we would eventually come across. In our case, Bitcoin came into existence as soon as the bandwidth and encryption tech allowed it to. In other universes or simulations it might look a bit different (e.g. might not be 21 million or ten minute block times exactly), but I think decentralized real-time settlement would become apparent as readily as electricity does, for any civilization that reaches this point. So ethics aside, it just is what it is. It exists, and thus we must deal with it.

The second part was that in my view, transparency and individual empowerment is rarely a bad thing. Half of the world is autocratic. And half of the world (not quite the same half) deals with massive structural inflation. A decentralized spreadsheet that allows individuals to store and send value can't possibly be a bad thing, unless humanity itself is totally corrupted. I then went into more detail with examples about historical war financing, and all sorts of tangible stuff. In other words, a whole chapter full of stuff. I've addressed this in some articles to.

In your view, if you had to steelman the argument as best as you could, what are the scenarios where bitcoin is *BAD* for humanity rather than good for it, on net?

TLDR: Higher debt issuance accountability doesn’t necessarily correlate to highly accountable governments or populations. (I certainly hope it does)

One of the things that bitcoin forces (supposing that governments adopt it and debt issuance is denominated in BTC) is fiscal responsibility. Once you can’t print money, you can’t recklessly spend and borrow, as there is a higher risk of default.

This assumes that this spending comes from incompetent or corrupt governments, that understand that they have low short term risk when doing so. And assumes that given a higher risk, they wouldn’t do it.

But what if most of this spending comes from a population that asks for it (Too many unsustainable social benefits etc…), and politicians just act the way the do because of incentives?

The reaction time, in a BTC standard is lower (given a scenario where there is too much debt issued, and there is poor fiscal management). I can easily imagine an economy going through some rough years, electing a populist party who spends a bit too much and issues a bit too much BTC denominated debt, and a debt spiral can easily kick off.

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