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Broken Money and the Way Out

An 50-page guide to why money is broken โ€” and what comes next.

Broken Money and the Way Out โ€” eBook cover

What's inside

50 pages. 17 chapters. Plain English.

  • 01 What is money, really?
  • 02 A brief history of money
  • 03 The gold standard and its end
  • 04 How money is actually created today
  • 05 Inflation is not an accident, it is the systemโ€™s design
  • 06 The Cantillon effect โ€” who stands at the source of the tap
  • 07 Debt, fiscal dominance and why there is no way back
  • 08 The broken compass โ€” why the old rules no longer hold
  • 09 Satoshi and 30 years of cryptographic searching
  • 10 What Bitcoin is โ€” a network and an asset
  • 11 Hard scarcity โ€” 21 million and a stop-loss on power
  • 12 Bitcoin is not โ€œcryptoโ€
  • 13 Bitcoin vs. gold โ€” two hard assets under the X-ray
  • 14 Seven myths you hear at the Sunday lunch
  • 15 How to start smart
  • 16 Invity as a signpost
  • 17 What to read and follow next

Chapter 01 ยท sample

What is money, really?

Before we start criticising todayโ€™s money, we have to answer what we expect from money in the first place. The answer is surprisingly old โ€” and surprisingly useful today.

Money is one of the oldest and at the same time least understood technologies of humankind. It is all around us, yet we think about it surprisingly little. The vast majority of people leave school knowing about genetics, quantum physics or the history of Rome โ€” but with no idea at all of how the money they hold in their wallet comes into being.

Letโ€™s start with a very simple question: what is money for? The answer is surprisingly old. Already Aristotle, in the 4th century BCE, described that money serves three functions.

The three functions of money

  • A medium of exchange โ€” it lets you trade things without having to need exactly what your counterpart has.
  • A store of value โ€” it lets you defer the purchasing power of todayโ€™s work into the future.
  • A unit of account โ€” it forms a shared language in which we compare the value of different things.

The properties of good money

For money to perform its functions well, it has to have certain physical and logical properties. Money historians usually name six.

Gold held its place in the competition of money media for five thousand years, because it combined all six properties above average. It was scarce enough, divisible by melting, verifiable by density, and durable forever.

The six properties of money

  • Durability โ€” money must not decay.
  • Portability โ€” you must be able to move it easily from A to B.
  • Divisibility โ€” it must split into smaller and larger units.
  • Recognisability โ€” a counterparty must be able to verify authenticity and quantity.
  • Fungibility โ€” one unit must equal another.
  • Scarcity โ€” and this is the most important one. If anyone could make as much as they wanted, it would have no value.
Radar chart with six axes (durability, scarcity, portability, fungibility, divisibility, verifiability) comparing gold, fiat, and Bitcoin.
The six properties of money โ€” a comparative diagram (gold, fiat, Bitcoin).

Chapter 02 ยท sample

A brief history of money

Humankind before money. The long road from shells to metal, from coins to paper, from paper to pixels.

If you have a childhood memory of trading stickers, you know what barter looks like โ€” the direct exchange of goods for goods. It stops working the moment a carpenter needs shoes and the cobbler doesnโ€™t happen to need a table. Economists call this the โ€œdouble coincidence of wantsโ€ and it is the first reason money came about.

Already in prehistoric cultures people noticed that some objects are accepted by everyone. Salt, grain, dried fish, furs, shells. They began to work as a universal medium of exchange. We call them commodity money.

Gold โ€” a technology proven over 5,000 years

Why gold? Silver was more abundant. Copper oxidised quickly. Iron rusted. Gold was wonderfully excellent: chemically inert, scarce enough that only a fraction of the existing stock is added each year.

Gold has a property economists call a high stock-to-flow. Its worldwide stock is enormous, while the amount added each year is roughly 1.5โ€“2 %. Even if geologists found a huge gold vein tomorrow, they could not double the supply in a year, nor in ten years.

Coins and the first debasement

The early minting of coins from gold and silver brought an enormous innovation โ€” the merchant no longer had to weigh every transaction. He received a coin with the rulerโ€™s mark and trusted it contained what the mark promised. But with this act of trust, an institution entered the monetary system differently than the merchant expected: the state.

The first great debasement in history was the gradual dilution of the Roman denarius. The emperors began diluting silver with cheaper metals so that, for the same weight of coin, they could pay more soldiers in the army.

Roman denarius silver content: 94% in 64 AD, 85% in 100 AD, 50% in 200 AD, 5% in 270 AD โ€” a 90% decline over 200 years.
The Roman denarius โ€” silver content over 200 years (~94 % โ†’ ~5 %).

The lesson: when a state needs more money than it collects in taxes, it starts a slow theft from the holders of the existing money.

Paper money and the great shortcut

Paper money was invented in China under the Tang dynasty (7th century) and spread under the Song. The principle was simple: heavy coins stayed with a trustworthy custodian and the merchant carried a voucher he could redeem.

This system was robust for several centuries, as long as one condition held: one piece of paper, one ounce of gold in the vault. The moment the issuer began printing more notes than it had gold to back them โ€” and that happened almost every time โ€” the paper began to lose value.

Horizontal timeline from 3000 BCE to 2025 with five layers: commodity money, metal coins, gold-backed paper, fiat (from 1971), digital/Bitcoin.
A timeline of monetary media โ€” from commodity money to Bitcoin.

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