An institution for the quantity of Bitcoins in the market increases dramatically, but the net amount is still 20 million or whatever. Once you start transacting and once Bitcoin is actually used in that way for commerce as a reserve currency,. You'll start to see entities actually need to provide that type of infrastructure for themselves. This is an infrastructure that would be set up by private companies to create private Bitcoins different from the actual Bitcoins. That's the way that dollar system did to adjust quantities and keep values constant.
When ARK CEO and CIO Cathie Wood was discussing Bitcoin and Digital Assets in general with her mentor and famed economist Dr. Arthur Laffer, he told her that it reminded him of an era before the Federal Reserve existed. This idea spurred Cathie to invite Dr. Laffer on the FYI podcast to further discuss the history of money in general and what Bitcoin’s role in the history of money might be. Alongside Cathie and Art, we are also pleased to welcome Ophelia Snyder, the Co-Founder and President of 21.co, a Cryptocurrency Exchange Traded Product (ETP) provider. In the discussion, Cathie, Art and Ophelia discuss the original idea of centralized money, the economic booms and busts of the past, the transparency of digital assets and much more.
Key Points From This Episode:
- The United States early definition of a dollar
- The relatively novel concept of centralized money
- A world before the Federal Reserve (Fed) in 1913, and how the Fed changed money
- Economic booms and busts in history starting with The Great Depression
- How the real economy has changed in the US and globally
- What a new Gold-Standard in the world of Digital Assets look like
- Art argues for the necessity of a price rule
- Stable coins and some of their inherent challenges
- Bitcoin’s similarities to Gold
- The number of wallets that hold Bitcoin long term
- The potentially changing role of the SEC
- Why a more transparent and decentralized ecosystem may be beneficial
Please note that 21.co and ARK are unaffiliated entities.