Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The political implications of bitcoin
The political implications of bitcoin
Oct 29, 2025 7:45 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
The Church as Cultural Lifeblood
After years of rejecting or downplaying so-called “organized religion,” evangelicals are beginning to appreciatethe church not only as organism, but as institution. As Robert Joustra explains at Capital Commentary, a “minor renaissance in thinking” is taking place, whereinthe church is viewed “not as a gathering of hierarchy-allergic spiritualists” but as “a brick and mortar institution, something with tradition, and weight, and history.” Evangelicals are beginning to seeview itnotas a “catchphrase and metaphor for likeminded people who love Jesus,” Joustra continues,...
Cast your vote now for the worst Christmas song — ever
OK, this is going to be a tough call. But Acton Research Fellow Jordan Ballor has bravely stepped up with his nominee for the “Worst Christmas Song Ever” in a piece for Patheos. His pick? Band Aid’s syrupy “Do They Know it’s Christmas?” Ballor reminds us that the song … … was released in 1984 as part of Band Aid, an effort organized by Bob Geldof in response to a famine that struck the east African nation of Ethiopia. The...
Burrito Bomb: Anti-GMO Chipotle Needs a Business Model Reality Check
Wednesday’s Wall Street Journal reported on startup Intrexon Corp.’s efforts to eradicate pests responsible for inflicting “billions of dollars a year in lost revenue and crop-protection expenses.” The pests in question are diamondback moths that wreak havoc on cabbage, broccoli and cauliflower crops, and the efforts involve genetically modifying females of the species so they die before reproducing. WSJ writer Jacob Bunge adds that a GMO potato developed by J.R. Simplot Co. that develops fewer black spots from bruising recently...
Hope Beyond the Headlines on Millennials and Religion
Some recent headlines: December 15: “Why millennials are leaving religion but embracing spirituality”December 14: “Growing number of Millennials shun religion”December 13: “Millennials and religion: The great disconnect”December 9: “Millennials less likely to be religious than older Americans” This certainly sounds bad. Why the recent flurry of these stories? Well, all of them reference a recent survey by the Pew Research Center. By “recent,” I mean it was published November 3. So more than a month ago. There is a real...
Pastors, Pulpits, and Politics
This week’s Acton Commentary is adapted from an introduction to a ing edited volume, The Church’s Social Responsibility: Reflections on Evangelicalism and Social Justice. The goal of the collection is to bring some wisdom to principled and prudential aspects of addressing plex questions related to responsible ecclesial word and deed today. A point of departure for the volume is the distinction between the church conceived institutionally and organically, perspectives formalized and popularized by the Dutch Reformed theologian and statesman Abraham...
The Economics of Bedford Falls (Part II)
[Note: This is the second post in a series highlighting some of the financial aspects and broad economic lessons of Frank Capra’s holiday classic, It’s a Wonderful Life. You can find part one here and part three here.] George’s Life Savings in a Life Insurance Policy George attempts to secure a loan from Potter based on his life insurance policy. He says it has a $15,000 face value and a $500 cash value. Why is his life insurance policy worth...
What Bernie Sanders (and High School Guidance Counselors) Get Wrong About College
I mostly blame high school guidance counselors for our current confusion about college. Don’t get me wrong, most counselors are fine, well-intentioned people. When I was a recruiter for the Marines in the mid-1990s I met dozens of them and appreciated the work they did. But as a group they tend to have a more-or-less unstated mantra: All kids should go to college. If a high school student expressed a very strong interest in the military or trade school (or...
Radio Free Acton: Puncturing Progressive Mythology with Larry Reed
FEE President Larry Reed speaks to a full house at the Acton Lecture Series Defenders of individual liberty and the American Constitutional order have long argued that Progressivism is a corrosive philosophy that undermines individual rights while failing to produce the social good claimed by its promoters. Why do progressive solutions to societal and economic problems so often fail? Perhaps it’s because the progressive philosophy is undergirded by a system of mythology that rivals that of the ancient Greeks. On...
Paris and the low-carbon conceit of climate activism
Regular readers of this space should consider themselves warned. In the wake of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC, or COP21), so-called “religious” shareholder activists are intent on ruining investments, crashing the economy and doubling down on their efforts to promote energy poverty throughout the world. But don’t take my word for it. Here’s James Corah, Secretary to the Church Investors Group: “Collaborative engagement amongst Church investors has driven significant change in corporate behavior in recent years....
5 Facts About the Bill of Rights
Today is Bill of Rights Day, memoration first established byPresident Franklin D. Rooseveltto cherish the ‘immeasurable privileges which the charter guaranteed’ and to rededicate its principles and practice.” Here are five facts you should know about the Bill of Rights: 1. At the Constitutional Convention in 1787, George Mason of Virginia said that he “wished the plan had been prefaced by a Bill of Rights,” because it would “give great quiet” to the people. A motion was made that mittee...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved