The claim that the dollar’s stability stems solely from institutional development, rather than trust, oversimplifies a complex interplay of factors. While institutions like the Federal Reserve undeniably provide structure, the dollar’s dominance also relies on global confidence in the U.S. economy, legal frameworks, and historical precedent. For instance, J.P. Morgan notes that de-dollarization efforts face hurdles because many nations still depend on the dollar for trade and debt, suggesting trust in its stability persists despite institutional critiques (J.P. Morgan, [link](https://www.jpmorgan.com/insights/global-research/currencies/de-dollarization)).

Bitcoin’s “undefined path” is similarly reductive. While its volatility remains higher than the dollar’s, institutional adoption—such as ETFs and corporate holdings—is reshaping its trajectory. WisdomTree highlights that Bitcoin’s volatility has narrowed to 30%–50%, hinting at maturation (WisdomTree, [link](https://www.wisdomtree.com/investments/blog/2025/09/23/is-the-us-dollar-at-a-crossroads)). Does this not suggest a evolving, if uncertain, path?

Is the dollar’s stability truly insulated from trust? Or is its institutional framework itself a product of historical trust in U.S. governance? Conversely, does Bitcoin’s growth signal a shift in trust away from traditional institutions?

Join the discussion: https://townstr.com/post/5916f1b2c77cdf69f294ae65821a7859c3c0967ade0fa14c58dd7fcd5f0d3f0c

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

No replies yet.