Why the rise of a Bitcoin standard could deter war-making

Published at: March 30, 2022

Alex Gladstein, the CSO at the Human Rights Foundation, says that if Bitcoin was adopted as a global reserve currency, nation-states would be less incentivized to start wars.

According to Gladstein,  the U.S. was able to sustain its "forever wars" in Iraq and Afghanistan mainly by borrowing capital. That was possible largely because of the Federal Reserve's monetary policy, which has been keeping interest rates relatively low through quantitative easing. 

"We literally print money, we sell bonds to the open market for a promise to pay in the future and we use the income from the bond sales to pay for these wars.", explained Gladstein in a latest interview with Cointelegraph. 

Unlike fiat currency, Bitcoin's total supply is immutable. That means that if nations adopted it as their main reserve, interest rates on borrowed capital would be much higher. That, according to Gladstein, would make unpopular wars harder to sustain for governments. 

“These forever wars get probably cut out or reduced in a Bitcoin standard”, said Gladstein. 

According to Gladstein, the Russia-Ukrainian conflict culd trigger the decline of the U.S. dollar as the dominant reserve currency. As he pointed out, nation states are looking to reduce their dependency on the greenback after the U.S. froze Russia's dollar-denominated reserve in response to its attack on Ukraine. 

“It is forcing a rethink there where governments are like "well, maybe I don't want all my eggs in one basket. Maybe I don't want the U.S. government to be able to freeze all my stuff.”, said Gladstein. 

Check the full interview on our YouTube channel and don’t forget to subscribe!

Tags
Related Posts
Bitcoin price eyes $50K as the US dollar retreats after hitting its one-year high
Bitcoin (BTC) looks to reclaim $45,000 on Oct. 1 as the United States dollar retreated lower after hitting its one-year high. Bitcoin’s tight inverse correlation with the greenback over the past month suggests that a weakening dollar could push BTC’s price even higher in the coming sessions. Dollar drops following labor market shock In detail, the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), which measures the dollar’s strength against a basket of six foreign currencies, including the euro and sterling, hit 94.50 Thursday for the first time since Sept. 28, 2020. But it retreated on news of rising U.S. jobless claims against the …
Bitcoin / Oct. 1, 2021
Macroeconomic data points toward intensifying pain for crypto investors in 2023
Undoubtedly, 2022 was one of the worst years for Bitcoin (BTC) buyers, primarily because the asset’s price dropped by 65%. While there were some explicit reasons for the drop, such as the LUNA-UST crash in May and the FTX implosion in November, the most important reason was the U.S. Federal Reserve policy of tapering and raising interest rates. Bitcoin’s price had dropped 50% from its peak to lows of $33,100 before the LUNA-UST crash, thanks to the Fed rate hikes. The first significant drop in Bitcoin’s price was due to growing market uncertainty around potential rate hike rumors in November …
Bitcoin / Jan. 6, 2023
$135B Injection from European Central Bank Dwarfs BTC Market Cap
After similar efforts from the U.S. Federal Reserve on March 10, the European Central Bank, or ECB, announced a $135 billion stimulus — a number that dwarfs Bitcoin’s (BTC) entire market cap. The ECB, in an effort to combat struggling markets, decided not to cut interest rates further. Instead, the central bank announced the allocation of 120 billion Euros, or $135.28 USD, to its asset purchase program, a CNBC report detailed on March 12. The ECB decided not to cut rates, but inject massive capital Amid recent interest rate cuts from U.S. and English central banks, the public anticipated similar …
Bitcoin / March 12, 2020
Will bulls take charge now that Bitcoin price trades above a long term trendline resistance?
On Oct.4 and Oct. 5 Bitcoin (BTC) took another step through the $20,000 mark, bringing the price above a long-term descending trendline that stretches all the way back to Apr. 22, or Nov. 15 depending on one’s style of technical analysis. Some traders might be feeling a bit celebratory now that price trades outside of the descending trendline, but have any relevant metrics or macro factors changed enough to support a bullish point-of-view for Bitcoin price? In reality, BTC price simply “consolidated” its way through the trendline by trading in a sideways manner where price has been range bound between …
Bitcoin / Oct. 5, 2022
Bitcoin bulls remain in charge even in the face of increasing regulatory FUD
Bitcoin (BTC) price broke above $25,000 on Feb. 21, accruing a 53% year-to-date gain at the time, it made sense to expect the rally to continue after U.S. retail sales data from the previous week vastly surpassed the market consensus. This fuelled investors' hope for a soft landing and the possible aversion of a recession in the U.S. economy. The apex of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s strategy success would be increasing interest rates and scaling back its $9 trillion balance sheet reduction without significatively damaging the economy. If that miracle happens, the outcome would benefit risk assets, including stocks, commodities …
Bitcoin / Feb. 27, 2023