The Fiat Standard — Lecture 12 (Fiat Cost-Benefit Analysis) • Study Notes
Overview
Mainstream critiques of Bitcoin often obsess over its energy consumption, comparing it to entire nations. Yet almost no one asks the parallel question: what are the costs of fiat?
This lecture weighs fiat’s benefits against its costs after a century of global dominance. The verdict: trivial efficiency gains, catastrophic systemic costs.
Part I: The Claimed Benefit of Fiat
- Engineering advantage: avoids moving gold around physically.
- 19th century: ships full of gold crossed oceans to settle trade.
- Risks: high cost, time, piracy, shipwrecks.
- With fiat:
- Only need digital communication (telegrams, SWIFT, electronic entries).
- Cheaper and faster than shipping gold.
Estimating cost savings:
- Assume transaction fees to ship gold ≈ 0.05–0.5% of value shipped.
- If ~10% of global wealth moved annually as gold → fiat saves ≈ 0.05% of global wealth per year.
- This is the maximum plausible benefit of fiat.
Part II: The True Costs of Fiat
1. Inflation
- CPI is unreliable (government bias, basket changes, productivity masking).
- Better measure: money supply growth.
- 1965–2020 averages:
- Switzerland: 6.7%
- U.S.: 7.4%
- EU: 7.8%
- Japan: 9.8%
- U.K.: 10.8%
- China: 20.3%
- Simple average (all currencies): 30%
- Weighted global average: ~14% annually
- In 2019:
- Global money supply: $95T
- Global wealth: $360T
- Fiat = 26% of wealth.
- 14% debasement of that = 3.6% of global wealth lost annually (~$15T in 2019).
2. Inequality
- Inflation raises value of hard assets (real estate, stocks).
- Rich hold assets → benefit.
- Poor hold cash → lose.
- Fiat mechanically transfers wealth from the bottom 90% to the top 10%.
3. Economic Distortions
- High time preference: discourages saving, encourages debt and consumption.
- Business cycles: credit expansion fuels booms, busts, and capital misallocation.
- Capital destruction: projects with negative real returns appear profitable if they lose money slower than inflation.
- Overconsumption & shoddy goods: people buy durable goods not for use but as stores of value, even if low quality.
- Partial barter system: fiat turns international trade into FX juggling, requiring geopolitical/macro awareness just to run business.
4. Empowered Governments
- Fiat grants states unlimited financing:
- Funds wars far beyond taxpayer tolerance.
- Expands bureaucracy and surveillance.
- Human toll:
- 20th century total wars and genocides financed by fiat.
- ~169 million killed by governments (democide).
- Fiat’s “proof-of-work” is violence and coercion, not honest accounting.
Part III: The Cost-Benefit Contrast
| Category | Fiat Standard | Gold Standard |
|---|---|---|
| Main benefit | Saves ~0.05% global wealth/yr (avoids gold transport). | Slightly higher settlement cost. |
| Inflation cost | ~3–4% of global wealth/yr lost (~$15T/yr). | Near-zero inflation. |
| Distribution effect | Extreme inequality, favors elites. | Savings preserved. |
| Capital allocation | Distorted, capital-consuming projects funded. | Only sustainable projects thrive. |
| Trade system | Partial barter, FX distortions, tariffs, protectionism. | Seamless international money. |
| Government power | Unlimited wars, surveillance, debt slavery. | Wars constrained by gold reserves. |
| Human cost | ~169M killed by states in 20th century, endless conflict. | Conflicts limited in scale/duration. |
Key Takeaways
- Fiat’s only real benefit: avoidance of gold shipping costs (~0.05% of wealth).
- Fiat’s systemic costs dwarf that:
- Inflation = $15T/year lost.
- Widened inequality.
- Distorted economies and high time preference.
- Enabling of total war and authoritarianism.
- Fiat converts civilization into a debt-slavery system, financing destruction while enriching elites.
- Bitcoin reintroduces hard money discipline without the physical transport problem, preserving savings while enabling digital global settlement.