What Can Iceland and Cryptocurrencies Tell Us About A New Monetary System And A Universal Basic Income?steemCreated with Sketch.

in #cryptocurrency7 years ago (edited)

Despite it's tiny size, Iceland experienced the third largest financial collapse in history, and largest by GDP, during the 2008 Global Financial Crisis (GFC). Nationalisation of the country's three major private banks followed, and constitutional reform has been on the agenda and progressed since. One of the major outcomes of this disaster has been a serious inquiry into reforming the country's monetary system. Most notably, who should have the power to create money?

Who creates the money now?

In the vast majority of cases it is commercial banks that create most of the money in circulation around the world. They do this via a unique and frankly extraordinary privilege they have amongst corporations - the ability to literally magic money into existence at a keystroke, and then earn interest on it. The act of loaning money (created as debt) literally creates new money.

One argument in favour of this system is that it keeps money creation out of the hands of politicians. Something we can probably all agree is a good thing. However, there are significant downsides to this system. By leaving the vast majority of money creation in the hands of a relatively small number of private corporations, we cede a lot of control over how much money is created and where it is spent in the economy. This presents an inflation risk, and leads to bubble creation. And equally concerning is that it is potentially impossible to pay off world debt. Because each new unit of money that enters circulation requires even more money to repay the interest charged on it, we are always playing a catch up game.

What others methods can we use to create money?

Central banks, like the Federal Reserve in the US or the European Central Bank, have the ability to create new money, and indeed they do this from time to time. Most notably when they engage in what's called Quantitative Easing (QE). Keep in mind what is going on here. A central bank is literally creating "free" money and putting it into circulation. This goes against what many of us instinctively think as to where money comes from and how it is used. Remember the common maxim - "Money doesn't grow on trees"? This is supposed to represent the fact that money is scarce and holds an almost mystical set of properties (if it doesn't come from a reliable source, where the hell does it come from, right?). But the reality is that money (metaphorically) does grow on trees. It's not necessarily scarce. It can be created at will. The only reasonable constraint is what effect any new money has on already existing money (i.e. inflation).

When we realise that money isn't some mystical creation from who knows where, and that we are in fact in total control of the process, we are better able to consider more rational approaches to its creation.

Iceland and Cryptocurrencies

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While Iceland isn't implementing or supporting a national cryptocurrency (I can hear some of you pirates sighing...), what they are proposing to do to their monetary system has parallels with the concept of crypto- (and other alternative) currencies. Cryptocurrency is the perfect example of not only the fact that money can be simply created at will, but also that it's not necessarily the State that gives money its authority and seemingly magical qualities. It's the people that hold that money that determine its authority. And this isn't a novel concept. Alternative (and often local) currencies have been used over the centuries when necessary or desired. And they have boomed in number since the GFC.

So what exactly is Iceland proposing? Among other things, they are proposing to remove totally the privilege commercial banks hold to create money (and charge interest on that money) and return it to the independent central bank. The proposal is known as the Sovereign Money System, and would see the Central Bank of Iceland solely responsible for money creation, leaving commercial banks to fulfil the role of safekeeping and transacting money for a fee, and lending out already existing money via a Full Reserve Banking system. And again, this isn't a novel idea. In the 1930's the economist Irving Fisher proposed this in what was to become known as "the Chicago Plan".

A consequence of this is that commercial banks will no longer be the prime determinant of where new money is spent in society (currently 50% or thereabouts of most banks assets (i.e. loans, i.e. new money) are supporting real estate bubbles). To account for this, the proposal suggests various methods be considered for getting money into the economy, and these include funding certain government spending (similar to Jeremy Corbyn's "People's QE" proposal) and what's known as "helicopter money" (i.e. direct deposits into citizens bank accounts) as first proposed by Milton Friedman.

Direct deposits into citizens accounts... Does that sound familiar?

When applied universally and unconditionally, this is exactly what a Universal Basic Income (UBI) would be. And while most UBI models envisage either savings or taxation (or a combination of both) as a means to fund the payment, as we can see from the realities of cryptocurrencies and the proposals from economists and public figures as diverse as Fisher, James Tobin, Milton Friedman, Jeremy Corbyn and the parliament of Iceland, it's not the only way to potentially fund desirable projects. And remember, money derives its authority to represent value from what the people who hold it themselves value. If we as a society value the concept of a UBI, there's nothing to say that money can't be created to represent and store this value in the same way that money is currently created by private banks to represent all sorts of worthwhile (and a lot of arguably worthless) value.

Can a UBI be implemented (in part) via a cryptocurrency?

Like any currency/monetary-system, as long as it can store value in a stable and accountable fashion, there's no particular reason why a cryptocurrency can't function in this role. And indeed we are already seeing cryptocurrencies move into this space. Most notably Grantcoint. Grantcoin offers a feature of independence in that the amount of new money created each year is set in stone (3.5% inflation). This removes the possibility of an authority getting greedy and pumping money out at an excessive rate, although it does remove one simple method of being able to manipulate inflation levels in the economy.

The Grantcoin project will be a fascinating one to watch, as it will provide a real world experiment regarding the simplification of the monetary system. Will its holders continue to value it? Will inflation become a problem? Will it gain wider traction in the retail world? I can't authoritatively answer that. But I'm glad it's happening, and I will be watching keenly to see how this project progresses.

(if you've got lots of followers, or even just a few, help a minnow out by resteeming this. Nothing worse than spending a lot of time creating an article and have no one read it. Thanks for your support!)

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Nice article man good to see more people talking about a UBI that doesn't work through endless inflation

Nice job, @revo. You touched on many aspects of currency creation, crypto and Universal Basic Income. I hadn't heard about Grantcoin, so am going to check it out.

Thanks banana. Unless I'm misremembering, Grantcoin became Manna.

yep, just looked it up and you're right. whew, one less thing I need to learn about, and now I can close one of my browser tabs. hahaha

Haha, I feel ya. I got an extension called OneTab, so you can fling all the tabs off to one tab and hide them there.. :D

ohmigosh, if I did that, I'd NEVER go and clear them out. My basic strategy is to leave everything open for a couple of weeks, then go back through and x out of all that are out-of-date or no longer pertinent.

not very efficient, actually...

I used to have hundreds open. I had a firefox extension that allowed you to group your tabs into topics/categories, and find them that way. But all it really did was allow me to amass more and more tabs. With the new firefox a lot of old extensions stopped working, so I had to delete it. When I did that I just deleted every open tab en masse. Man, that felt SO good.. :D

I don't think any coin will have a significant impact on society until a very substantial percentage of the population have access to it. As such efforts like Steem to give people access to currency a) for free and b) without needing a bank are very important. I'm looking at other efforts like BAT and the Brave browser that will further expand the scope of the consumers (readers) and publishers (writers - even if we are only publishing our comments and up/down opinions) among us. If those earnings can then easily be converted to other currency via bank-free distributed exchanges and traded for other goods and services we are well on to our way. At that point things like Grant coin and many others will have a much greater impact.

Anyway, blockchains aside - your post has some very interesting information about Iceland. It's amazing to think they have a population of just 300,000 - that's less than the city I live in and it's not even a big city. They have a small population but big dreams and that's encouraging. If they can do it then why can't almost every city and certainly every State in the USA? Why do we even need a Federal Government? My theory is that it only exists now to keep the States in compliance with the Federal Reserve banking system cartel. I'd love to see one of our smaller states just do away with private banks printing money and only have a State Reserve fund like Norway has a Sovereign wealth fund worth well over $100K for every man, woman and child in that country. And they didn't even start it that long ago relatively speaking. Imagine if the US had done that with our oil resources from the start. We could all be living like kings and quite literally the most envied country in the world - assuming we did away with the rent seekers in the middle of every transaction.

Sadly even with another 30 or 40 years I don't think I'll live long enough to see that happen in the US, but it could - one might even posit that "it will" since the technology, like public key encryption, is out of the bag and you can't put it back.

What can I say - we live in interesting times!

@revo, this is where we are failing on steemit. That was an awesome article, well thought out, I couldn't find any errors(every book I've ever read contained an error), a professionally done blog post. 213 people looked at it, 20 people voted on it and just a few commented.

This article should've made some real money and it hasn't made a dollar. Most of my rewards come from two whales and my own purchase of self-promotion. It's a shame. Whatever it's worth I upvoted and resteemed your post.

Thanks mate. I guess if I ever reach a considerably higher SP and influence I'll just repost it and get my cut then.. ;)

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Always a pleasure reading uber important phenomena.

UBI is an incredibly important topic that will be arriving faster than almost everyone seems to understand.

It is the next big step before money is obliterated altogether (via molecular manufacturing, nanotechnology, singularity type phenomena waking up and enlightening the very fabric of matter, Extremely Strong AI, and well, you know, the like...I'll do some writing on it late this week, and I will formulate it to rhymulate...while of course still remaining socratically and scientifically sound)

Image Credit: https://savetheearth.coop/blog/debate-universal-basic-income/

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Great read thanks for sharing. Teaching ecurrency is an everyday grind but only to the closed mind, I don't think we'll find many of those here on Steemit. I kind a like it here, once I figured things out :) hence, why I don't have a profile pic, how do you download one?! Anyway, thanks again.

Agreed. Steemit is where we make it happen.
Profile Pic: Good Question. Post it here or on any page and then its on Steemit and you copy it into the profile pic box and presto, you've got your profile picture up and ready.
Anyway, that's what worked for me as the other route did not work.
That's the "workaround"

Cheers, and keep elevating life forward!

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My main concern for the concept of UBI is that, to me, money is merely a medium of exchange that facilitates exchanges.

The concept of exchange implies value for both parties involved and if one party is receiving value in the form of some currency for no input, the system falls apart.

Like Milton Friedman said,

Nobody spends somebody else's money as wisely as he spends his own.

I don't think Fractional Reserve Banking is necessarily bad, only when those fractions become as insanely small as they are now. The problem is not the system itself, but the corruption in the system that allows non-producers to manipulate it to their own benefit and to the detriment of the producers.

In a sense their input will be to spend the money they get, propping capitalism up. Not to mention probably a heap of other contributions to society.

In a sense their input will be to spend the money they get

I think there's about a decade of Twist & Zerp and QE1-99 that don't bear out that hypothesis, not to mention the decades of poverty that welfare has trapped minorities and low income families in here in the US.

I respect Iceland for defaulting on the debt and prosecuting the criminal bankers responsible.

Good luck with UBI.

I don't know what "Twist & Zerp and QE1-99" is supposed to be, but the implication that poor people don't spend their money into the economy is ridiculous.

And you'd need to provide proof that welfare "trapped" people into poverty.

Twist, Zerp and the series of QE's are all of the "Quantitative Easing" stimuli that the US Federal Reserve have used in their "attempt" to stimluate the economy. They have been unsuccessful.

As far as welfare is concerned, I don't think I could say it any better than Milton Friedman.

QE isn't the same as a UBI. A lot of QE wasn't spent into the economy. And I'm not sure how much evidence Milton can produce from the 1970's.

Yes, the vast majority of the "stimulus" money is still in the hands of the banks. In terms of stimulating an economy, it would have been more effective to simply give people people "helicopter money". Instead it was given to the criminals that caused the problems in order to prop up their failing banks by the unelected and unaccountable controllers of the money supply, the central banks. I don't believe the intent was anything more than that, keep their friends out of jail.

As far as welfare goes, there's a vast amount of evidence, over 50 years worth, that shows the negative effects of paying people not to work. Drive through the slums of Detroit or Chicago some day if you'd like to see the real effects of welfare.

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