Research & Insights

The Case for Bitcoin

A curated exploration of monetary history, macroeconomic risk, and why Bitcoin may be the most significant financial innovation of our time.

6 Major Reserve Currencies in Modern History
~94 yrs Average Reserve Currency Lifespan
~124% US Debt-to-GDP Ratio (2025)
21M Bitcoin Hard Cap — Forever
Explore the Evidence ↓

Every Reserve Currency Has an Expiration Date

Throughout history, global reserve currencies have cycled through dominant empires. Each has lasted roughly a human lifetime before giving way to the next. The US Dollar, crowned the world's reserve currency at Bretton Woods in 1944, is now over 80 years old — approaching the historical average.

Duration of Reserve Currency Dominance

Years each currency served as the dominant global reserve currency. The dashed line marks the historical average.

Based on research from Ray Dalio's Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order (2021). Duration estimates represent periods of peak trade and financial dominance. The US Dollar is shown as ongoing from 1944 (Bretton Woods Agreement) through 2025.
~94
Average Years
The average lifespan of the five completed reserve currencies preceding the US Dollar.
81+
Years for USD
The US Dollar has been the primary reserve currency since 1944 — fast approaching the historical average.
100%
Historical Turnover Rate
Every single reserve currency in recorded history has eventually been replaced or lost its dominant status.
The most important thing to know about the arc of a country's rise and decline is that it follows a logical and timeless pattern driven by a set of cause-effect relationships that are just as applicable today as they were throughout history.
— Ray Dalio, Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order (2021)
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What This Means

Reserve currency cycles are driven by the rise and fall of empires: economic strength, military power, debt accumulation, and eventually debasement. Dalio identifies a predictable "Big Debt Cycle" that has played out across Portuguese, Dutch, British, and now American dominance. Each empire peaked and then showed the same late-cycle characteristics: extreme debt accumulation, wealth inequality, political polarization, and a rising challenger. Dalio has pointed to China as the rising challenger to US dominance today, and documents how the US is exhibiting many of these same late-cycle signals.

The US Debt Spiral: A Historical Reckoning

The United States national debt now exceeds $36 trillion, pushing the debt-to-GDP ratio to levels last seen during World War II — and projected to keep climbing. Historically, countries that reach these ratios face a narrow set of outcomes. None of them are painless.

US National Debt
$36.2T
As of early 2025
↗ US Treasury Fiscal Data
Debt-to-GDP Ratio
~124%
2025 estimate
↗ Federal Reserve FRED
Annual Interest Cost
~$1.1T
Exceeds US defense budget
↗ Congressional Budget Office
Annual Deficit
~$1.8T
FY 2024 (6.4% of GDP)
↗ CBO FY2024 Budget Results

US Federal Debt as % of GDP (1940–2025)

The ratio has surpassed WWII-era peaks and continues to climb — with no credible fiscal consolidation plan in sight.

Data sourced from Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED) and the US Congressional Budget Office (CBO). Post-2024 values reflect CBO baseline projections. Shaded region indicates projected trajectory.

Historical Precedents: Nations at 100%+ Debt-to-GDP

The historical record is sobering. Here is how other countries have fared when their debt reached comparable levels.

Country Peak Debt/GDP Period Outcome Result
United Kingdom ~250% Post-WWII (1946) 30+ years of slow growth, austerity, and significant inflation eroded the real debt burden over time Survived (slowly)
Japan ~260% 2024 (ongoing) Deflation trap, Bank of Japan monetization, 30+ years of stagnation ("Lost Decades") Ongoing
Greece ~180% 2011–2018 Debt crisis requiring IMF/EU bailout, severe austerity imposed, GDP fell ~25% over several years Crisis / Bailout
Argentina ~100% 2001, 2014, 2020 Repeated sovereign defaults, hyperinflation, currency collapse (peso lost 99%+ vs USD) Default / Inflation
Weimar Germany Extreme 1921–1923 Hyperinflation — prices doubled every few days; wheelbarrows of cash needed to buy bread Hyperinflation
United States ~124%+ 2024–present Fiscal dominance constrains monetary policy; deficit spending continues accelerating; no credible plan to stabilize Ongoing (?)

Sources: IMF World Economic Outlook Database · Federal Reserve FRED · Reinhart & Rogoff, This Time Is Different (2009) · US Congressional Budget Office

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The Four Historical Escape Routes — and Their Costs

Economists identify four ways nations resolve extreme debt burdens:

  1. Austerity — Cutting spending and raising taxes. Deeply unpopular, politically difficult, and slow. The UK spent 30+ years on this path after WWII.
  2. Default — Outright refusal to pay creditors. Destroys credit access for years. Argentina has done this multiple times.
  3. Growth — If the economy outgrows the debt, the ratio falls naturally. This requires sustained high GDP growth — rare at this debt level, and nearly impossible with high interest rates.
  4. Inflation — The most historically common path. Governments inflate away the real value of debt, effectively transferring wealth from savers and fixed-income holders to the debtor (the government). With $36T in debt, even sustained 5% annual inflation erodes the real debt burden significantly — but at the cost of devastating ordinary savers.

The inflation path is the most politically expedient — and the most punishing for anyone holding US dollars as a store of value.

What Changed on August 15, 1971

On a Sunday evening, President Nixon announced the end of the dollar's convertibility to gold — a "temporary" measure that became permanent. The data that followed tells a story mainstream economics has struggled to explain ever since.

US Federal Debt
1971
$398B
2025
$36.2T
~90x increase in 54 years
↗ US Treasury Fiscal Data
US Personal Savings Rate
Early 1970s
~13%
2024
~4%
Americans can no longer afford to save
↗ Federal Reserve FRED — PSAVERT
Young Adults Earning More Than Parents
Early 1970s
~90%
2010s
~50%
The American Dream is half as likely
↗ Raj Chetty et al. — Opportunity Insights
Dollar Purchasing Power
1971
$1.00
2025
~$0.13
~87% of purchasing power lost since 1971
↗ BLS CPI Inflation Calculator

US Personal Savings Rate (1960–2024)

Americans saved ~10–13% of income before 1971. The savings rate collapsed in the fiat era as inflation eroded purchasing power, forcing people to invest in assets just to preserve wealth.

Data: Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED), series PSAVERT. The 2020 spike reflects pandemic-era stimulus and reduced spending, not organic saving behavior. Source: fred.stlouisfed.org/series/PSAVERT

Productivity Grew. Wages Didn't Follow.

The central economic story of the fiat era: the economy became dramatically more productive, but ordinary workers captured little of that growth.

+61%
US Productivity Growth (1979–2020)
The American economy became dramatically more efficient and productive over four decades of the fiat era.
↗ Economic Policy Institute
+17.5%
Typical Worker Compensation (same period)
For every dollar of productivity gain, typical workers captured only 29 cents. The rest accrued to capital owners and asset holders whose wealth inflated alongside money supply.
↗ Economic Policy Institute
3.5×
The Gap: Productivity vs. Pay
Productivity grew 3.5x faster than typical worker compensation from 1979 to 2020 — a divergence that did not exist before the gold standard was abandoned.
↗ Economic Policy Institute

What Actually Triggered the Nixon Shock

Nixon's August 15, 1971 announcement was not ideological — it was defensive. In the first six months of 1971 alone, $22 billion in assets had fled the United States as foreign governments exchanged dollars for US gold at the Bretton Woods rate of $35/oz, rapidly draining Fort Knox. France's President de Gaulle had been particularly aggressive, sending a French naval vessel to the US to physically collect gold.

Nixon chose to suspend convertibility rather than face an accelerating run on reserves. The "temporary" suspension never ended. From that day forward, every major currency in the world has been backed by nothing but political promises — a monetary experiment with no historical precedent.

Source: Nik Bhatia, Layered Money (2021) · Federal Reserve History — "Gold Convertibility Ends"

A Brief History of Money Debasement

Every government that has controlled its money supply has eventually abused that control. The pattern is always the same — expand supply to fund spending, erode the savings of citizens, and ultimately collapse the monetary system. Bitcoin is the first technology that makes this mathematically impossible.

~100 BCE – 300 CE

Roman Empire: The Silver Denarius

Julius Caesar issued the silver denarius with approximately 85% silver content. As military costs rose and conquest slowed, successive emperors debased the coin — mixing in cheaper metals while keeping its name and denomination. By the reign of Gallienus in the 3rd century CE, the silver content had fallen to under 5%. The resulting inflation destabilized the empire, caused widespread economic dislocation, and contributed to the political instability that led to Rome's eventual collapse.

85% silver → under 5% silver in ~300 years
↗ Saifedean Ammous — The Bitcoin Standard (2018)
~1890s

Yap Island: The Rai Stone Collapse

For centuries, the inhabitants of Yap Island in the Pacific used giant limestone disks — some weighing up to 4 metric tons — as money. The system worked precisely because the stones were extremely difficult to quarry from distant islands, giving them a naturally high stock-to-flow ratio. When Irish-American captain David O'Keefe arrived with modern equipment and began importing large quantities of the stones in exchange for coconuts, he flooded the supply. The stones became valueless almost overnight.

Ammous uses this story to illustrate the central vulnerability of every monetary system except Bitcoin: any money whose supply can be expanded — by new technology, a new mine, or a printing press — eventually will be. The only defense is a supply schedule that no individual can override.

Centuries of stability → worthless when supply was flooded
↗ William Henry Furness III — The Island of Stone Money (1910)
1921 – 1923

Weimar Germany: Hyperinflation

Following WWI, Germany faced massive war reparations under the Treaty of Versailles. The Reichsbank financed government spending by printing money without restraint. Prices doubled every few days. At its peak in November 1923, the exchange rate reached 4.2 trillion marks per US dollar. Workers were paid twice daily and rushed to spend their wages before prices rose again. The middle class's life savings were wiped out overnight. The social destruction contributed directly to the political conditions that enabled the rise of National Socialism a decade later.

4.2 trillion marks = $1 USD by November 1923
↗ Saifedean Ammous — The Bitcoin Standard (2018)
1933 – 1934

United States: FDR's Gold Confiscation

In 1933, President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 6102, requiring all US citizens to surrender their gold coins, gold bullion, and gold certificates to Federal Reserve Banks — under penalty of up to 10 years imprisonment. Citizens received $20.67 per troy ounce. Then in 1934, the Gold Reserve Act raised the official gold price to $35 per troy ounce — an overnight 41% devaluation of every dollar exchanged for gold the year prior. The government captured the entire windfall. Citizens who had trusted the government's promise had no recourse.

Gold confiscated at $20.67/oz · Revalued to $35/oz the next year · 41% devaluation
↗ Federal Reserve History — Roosevelt's Gold Program
1971

United States: The Nixon Shock

On August 15, 1971, President Nixon ended the dollar's convertibility to gold — eliminating the last physical anchor for any major currency on earth. From this moment, every nation's money supply became theoretically unlimited, constrained only by political will. The "temporary" suspension became a permanent feature of the global monetary system. In the 54 years since, the dollar has lost approximately 87% of its purchasing power, total US debt has increased roughly 90-fold, and no mechanism exists to prevent further expansion.

$1 in 1971 = ~$0.13 today · Every major currency is now fully fiat
↗ Federal Reserve History — Gold Convertibility Ends
2009

Bitcoin: The First Undebaseable Money

On January 3, 2009, Satoshi Nakamoto mined the first Bitcoin block — embedding a Times newspaper headline in the genesis block: "Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks." Bitcoin was deliberately designed to solve the debasement problem: its supply is fixed at 21 million coins, enforced by mathematics rather than political promises. No emperor, president, or central bank can increase the supply. The Roman denarius, the Weimar mark, the pre-FDR dollar — all were debased when governments faced fiscal pressure. Bitcoin's supply schedule makes this structurally impossible.

21,000,000 BTC · Hard cap · Enforced by mathematics · Forever
↗ Satoshi Nakamoto — Bitcoin Whitepaper (2008)
The entire history of government-controlled money is the history of inflation, because the temptation to print is always irresistible to the politicians in charge.
— Saifedean Ammous, The Bitcoin Standard (2018)

Broken Money: Why Our Financial System is Failing Us

Lyn Alden's landmark 2023 book argues that money itself — not just financial policy — is fundamentally broken. Drawing on monetary history spanning millennia, she makes the case that fiat currency is a flawed experiment and that Bitcoin is the first genuinely new monetary technology in centuries.

Broken
Money
Lyn Alden
2023

Core Thesis

Money is fundamentally a communication and ledger technology — a system for tracking and transmitting value across time and space. Throughout history, societies have used many forms of money: shells, gold, silver, paper. Each was eventually replaced by something with superior monetary properties.

Alden argues the current fiat system — where governments create money without constraint — is inherently prone to debasement. This creates a systemic, ongoing transfer of wealth from ordinary savers to those closest to the money creation process (governments, banks, wealthy asset holders). Economist Richard Cantillon first described this dynamic in the 18th century — it is now known as the Cantillon Effect.

Her conclusion: Bitcoin is the first monetary technology that solves the core problem — providing absolute, mathematically-enforced scarcity that no authority can override.

Key Facts & Statistics

💸
Dollar Purchasing Power
~97% Lost
Decline in US dollar purchasing power since the Federal Reserve was established in 1913. A 1913 dollar has the purchasing power of roughly 3–4 cents today.
↗ BLS CPI Inflation Calculator
📈
Post-Nixon Decline
~87% Lost
Decline in dollar purchasing power since August 1971, when Nixon suspended gold convertibility, removing any hard constraint on money creation.
↗ BLS CPI Inflation Calculator
🏛
Fiat Currency Failures
Hundreds
The number of fiat currencies that have failed through hyperinflation, default, or forced replacement. No fiat currency has maintained purchasing power over a multi-century timeframe.
↗ Lyn Alden — Broken Money (2023)
The Cantillon Effect
Structural Inequality
Newly created money benefits those who receive it first — governments, banks, and wealthy asset holders — before prices rise. By the time new money reaches ordinary workers, prices have already adjusted upward.
↗ Lyn Alden — Broken Money (2023)
🏭
Fractional Reserve Amplification
Money from Thin Air
Commercial banks can create money through lending — for every dollar deposited, they can loan out many more. This system requires perpetual debt growth to sustain itself, and collapses when trust breaks down.
↗ Lyn Alden — Broken Money (2023)
📡
Money as Communication
The Core Insight
Alden's central reframing: money is not a "thing" — it's a ledger, a communication technology for recording and transmitting value. Better ledger technology (like Bitcoin) can replace inferior ledger technology (fiat), just as email replaced physical mail.
↗ Lyn Alden — Broken Money (2023)
Energy-Backed Money
Proof of Work
Sound money requires real-world energy and work to produce — whether gold mining or Bitcoin mining. This "proof of work" prevents arbitrary creation and creates unforgeable costliness. Fiat requires no work: it is created with a keystroke.
↗ Lyn Alden — Broken Money (2023)
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Banking the Unbanked
~1.4 Billion Adults
Adults globally without access to a bank account. Many are excluded by geography, documentation, government restrictions, or poverty. Bitcoin and the Lightning Network provide financial access to anyone with a smartphone.
↗ World Bank Global Findex 2021

Deep Dives: Alden's Key Arguments

Click any topic to expand the full argument.

On August 15, 1971, President Nixon unilaterally ended the Bretton Woods system by suspending the dollar's convertibility into gold. From that moment, the dollar was backed only by trust in the US government — not any physical commodity. This "Nixon Shock" fundamentally changed the nature of all global money, since every major currency was pegged to the dollar.

Alden documents how this single decision unleashed a 50-year monetary experiment: fiat money with no external constraint on creation. The results are measurable — dramatically faster dollar debasement, rising asset prices relative to wages, increasing wealth inequality, and the financialization of the economy as people are forced to invest in assets (stocks, real estate) just to preserve purchasing power.

Before 1971: average American could afford a house on one income. After 1971: housing costs have risen dramatically faster than wages, requiring two incomes and large debt loads just to own a home in most cities.

When a government's debt is so large that the central bank cannot raise interest rates without triggering a fiscal crisis, this situation is called "fiscal dominance." At $36T in US debt, every 1 percentage point rise in average interest rates costs roughly $360 billion in additional annual interest — more than the entire defense budget of most countries.

This severely limits the Federal Reserve's ability to fight inflation with rate hikes, because doing so accelerates the debt spiral. Higher rates → higher interest costs → larger deficits → more debt issuance → potential loss of confidence → even higher rates. Alden argues the US is already in or approaching fiscal dominance, meaning sustained high inflation may be structurally baked in as the path of least political resistance.

The implication: the Fed's independence to fight inflation is constrained by the Treasury's need to borrow cheaply. This is not a temporary problem — it compounds with every year of deficit spending.

Since the 1970s, global oil trade has been priced primarily in US dollars, creating structural demand for dollars worldwide. Countries must hold dollars to buy oil — this "petrodollar" arrangement has supported dollar value and allowed the US to run persistent trade deficits without the currency collapsing.

This arrangement is now under visible pressure. Saudi Arabia, Russia, China, and others are increasingly settling oil trades in non-dollar currencies — yuan, rubles, UAE dirhams. The BRICS nations have discussed creating alternatives to dollar-denominated trade settlement. As dollar demand from oil trade diminishes, some of the artificial structural demand for US dollars could dissipate, adding significant downward pressure on purchasing power.

This isn't an overnight event — but it is a structural trend that Alden identifies as a long-term headwind for dollar strength, compounding the fiscal dominance problem.

Alden concludes that Bitcoin represents the most significant monetary innovation since paper money replaced gold coins. It combines the core properties of the best historical monies while adding entirely new capabilities: the scarcity of gold (fixed supply of 21 million), the portability of digital money (transmittable anywhere in seconds for minimal cost), the censorship-resistance of physical cash (no government can freeze a self-custodial Bitcoin wallet), and the auditability of a public ledger (anyone can verify the total supply in real time).

Critically, Bitcoin is the first monetary network in history where the rules are enforced by mathematics and distributed consensus — not by any government, bank, or trusted third party. The protocol cannot be changed by executive order, emergency decree, or central bank decision. This is a genuinely new property that no prior monetary system has ever possessed.

Alden is careful not to predict price — her argument is about Bitcoin's monetary properties and their fit with the problems she identifies in the current system. Whether Bitcoin achieves widespread adoption as monetary infrastructure depends on network effects, regulatory environment, and continued development of the Lightning Network for everyday payments.

How Money Works in Layers

Every monetary system in history has been a pyramid of promises. At the top: a settlement asset with no counterparty risk. Below it: progressively more abstract promises to deliver that asset. Understanding this structure explains both why the current system is fragile — and precisely why Bitcoin matters.

Layer 1
Settlement Money
Gold · Bitcoin
No counterparty risk · Final, irreversible settlement
Layer 2
Central Bank Money
Federal Reserve Notes · Bank of England Notes
Promise to deliver Layer 1 · Controlled by governments
Layer 3
Commercial Bank Money
Your checking & savings account balance
Promise to deliver Layer 2 · What most people actually hold
Layer 4
Financial Products
Eurodollars · Money market funds · Derivatives
Most abstract · Highest counterparty risk · Fewest people realize they hold this

Banking and currency crises occur when holders of lower-layer money rush to redeem into higher-layer money. Since 1971, there is no true Layer 1 accessible to ordinary citizens — the US Treasury bond replaced gold at the apex. Bitcoin restores a genuine, accessible, trustless settlement layer.

How the State Captured the Pyramid: Key Milestones

The history of money is the history of states gradually eliminating citizen access to first-layer settlement money — and replacing it with increasingly abstract promises.

1252
Gold Florin
The Florentine mint issued the Fiorino d'Oro — 3.5 grams of pure gold. It maintained unchanged weight and purity for ~300 years, becoming the reserve currency of Renaissance Europe and the most stable monetary standard in recorded history.
First-layer money at its most reliable
↗ Nik Bhatia — Layered Money (2021)
1609
Bank of Amsterdam
The world's first reserve bank. Required all gold and silver to be deposited, issued claims in return, and held 100% reserves — deposits were direct claims on physical metal with no counterparty risk. Pioneered instant, zero-fee transfers between accounts.
Second-layer money with full gold backing
↗ Nik Bhatia — Layered Money (2021)
1694
Bank of England
Founded specifically to finance England's military operations. Became the first institution to monopolize banknote issuance. The state captured "the pivotal position between the first and second layers" — controlling who could issue money substitutes.
State captures second-layer money creation
↗ Nik Bhatia — Layered Money (2021)
1913
Federal Reserve
Created after the Panic of 1907 as a government-sanctioned banking cartel and "lender of last resort." Eliminated the two natural market limits on credit expansion: bank runs and interbank clearing. Unlimited credit expansion became structurally possible.
Unlimited credit expansion becomes possible
↗ Federal Reserve History
1933
Gold Confiscation
FDR's Executive Order 6102 forced US citizens to surrender all gold at $20.67/oz — then revalued it to $35/oz the following year. The dollar became second-layer money with no accessible first layer beneath it for ordinary Americans.
Citizens lose access to first-layer money
↗ Federal Reserve History
1944
Bretton Woods
730 delegates from 44 nations established the US dollar as the global reserve currency at $35/oz gold. The US held ~two-thirds of all global gold reserves. Foreign central banks could redeem dollars for gold; ordinary citizens could not.
Dollar becomes global reserve
↗ Federal Reserve History — Bretton Woods
1971
Nixon Shock
Nixon closed the gold window. Even foreign central banks could no longer redeem dollars for gold. The last link between any currency and a first-layer asset was severed. US Treasury bonds — promises denominated in dollars — replaced gold at the apex.
All monetary links to gold severed globally
↗ Federal Reserve History — Nixon Shock
2009
Bitcoin
For the first time in history, a first-layer settlement asset exists that no state can confiscate, devalue, or suspend. Like gold before 1933, it holds no counterparty risk. Unlike gold, it cannot be seized by executive order or counterfeited. The layered pyramid can be rebuilt on a trustless foundation.
New first-layer money · Cryptographically enforced
↗ Satoshi Nakamoto — Bitcoin Whitepaper
The best way to think about Bitcoin's base layer protocol is as a final settlements layer. Every confirmed Bitcoin transaction is settled and irreversible with no counterparty risk — exactly the properties of first-layer money throughout all of monetary history.
— Nik Bhatia, Layered Money (2021)
🏭

The Bank for International Settlements: The Invisible Apex

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS), founded in 1930 in Basel, Switzerland — originally to manage German WWI reparations — now serves as the "central bank of central banks." It is the institution where national central banks hold reserves against each other and settle international balances. The BIS sits above even the Federal Reserve in the monetary pyramid. Most people have never heard of it.

Bhatia argues this reveals the true nature of the modern system: an ever-more-abstract pyramid of promises, with most people holding Layer 3 (commercial bank deposits) while the actual settlement layer exists only at the inter-institutional level, completely inaccessible to ordinary citizens.

↗ Bank for International Settlements — History

Why Bitcoin is Different

Given the historical pattern of reserve currency cycles, extreme debt levels, and ongoing monetary debasement — what properties would ideal sound money need to possess? Bitcoin was designed to possess all of them, and has proven its resilience over 16+ years of real-world operation.

🔢

Mathematically Fixed Supply

21 million bitcoin will ever exist. This limit is enforced by the protocol itself — not a government promise or central bank policy. No politician, executive order, or emergency can change it. After the April 2024 halving, Bitcoin's annual supply inflation rate dropped to ~0.85% — lower than gold's estimated ~1.5%.

21,000,000 BTC · Hard Cap · Forever
↗ Satoshi Nakamoto — Bitcoin Whitepaper (2008)
🌏

Truly Decentralized

Bitcoin has no CEO, no headquarters, no board of directors, and no shutdown switch. Thousands of nodes worldwide independently maintain and verify the ledger. No single government, corporation, or person controls the network — a property no monetary system has ever achieved at scale before.

~17,000+ reachable nodes globally
↗ Bitnodes.io — Live Node Map
🔎

Fully Auditable Supply

Every transaction ever made on Bitcoin is publicly recorded and verifiable by anyone, in real time. You can audit the entire monetary supply in minutes — something impossible with any fiat currency, where money creation happens opaquely through central bank operations and fractional reserve lending.

100% Auditable · Always · By Anyone
↗ mempool.space — Bitcoin Explorer
🔐

True Self-Custody

You can hold your own Bitcoin with no bank, broker, or custodian required. "Not your keys, not your coins" — holding your own private keys means no counterparty can freeze, seize, block, or inflate away your holdings. True financial sovereignty for the first time in the digital age.

No Counterparty Risk · Sovereign Ownership
↗ Satoshi Nakamoto — Bitcoin Whitepaper (2008)

Global Settlement, Always Open

Bitcoin settles globally in ~10 minutes on the base layer, or near-instantly with the Lightning Network. Anyone, anywhere, can send any amount to anyone else with no permission required, no borders, no business hours, 24/7/365. Traditional wire transfers take days and require institutional permission.

No Borders · No Business Hours · No Permission
↗ Satoshi Nakamoto — Bitcoin Whitepaper (2008)

16+ Years of Proven Uptime

Bitcoin has operated continuously since January 3, 2009 — with 99.98%+ uptime. The protocol has never been successfully hacked. It has survived exchange collapses, government bans, contentious forks, regulatory attacks, and bear markets — and kept producing blocks every ~10 minutes throughout.

16+ Years · 99.98%+ Uptime · Never Hacked
↗ Clark Moody Bitcoin Dashboard
📈

Harder Than Gold — Stock-to-Flow

The stock-to-flow (S2F) ratio measures existing supply against annual new production. Gold's ratio is ~60x — meaning it would take 60 years of mining to double the existing supply. After Bitcoin's April 2024 halving, Bitcoin's annual supply growth rate fell to ~0.85%, giving it an S2F ratio exceeding gold's for the first time. Bitcoin is now mathematically the scarcest monetary asset in human history.

S2F > 100 · Annual inflation ~0.85% · Below gold's ~1.5%
↗ World Gold Council — Gold Supply Data
🏭

No Emperor Can Debase It

Roman emperors debased the denarius. Weimar politicians printed the mark into oblivion. FDR confiscated gold and devalued overnight. Nixon ended gold convertibility with a Sunday night TV address. Every monetary system controlled by a government has eventually been debased when political pressure demanded it. Bitcoin's rules cannot be changed by any government, court, or emergency decree.

No Executive Order Can Change the Supply Schedule
↗ Satoshi Nakamoto — Bitcoin Whitepaper (2008)

Comparing Monetary Properties

Property Gold Fiat (USD) Bitcoin
Scarcity ✓ Limited by mining ✗ Unlimited creation ✓✓ Mathematically fixed at 21M
Portability ✗ Heavy & difficult ✓ Digital transfers ✓✓ Instant, global, permissionless
Divisibility ✗ Difficult to divide ✓ Cents, fractions ✓✓ 1/100,000,000 BTC (1 satoshi)
Censorship Resistance ✗ Can be confiscated ✗ Freezable, sanctionable ✓✓ Self-custodial private keys
Verifiability ✗ Requires physical assay ✗ Trust required ✓✓ Cryptographically proven
Supply Auditability ✗ Unknown total supply ✗ Opaque Fed balance sheet ✓✓ Fully transparent, real-time
Settlement Speed ✗ Days (physical transfer) ~ Hours to days (SWIFT/wire) ✓✓ Minutes (base) / Instant (Lightning)
Bitcoin is a remarkable cryptographic achievement, and the ability to create something that is not duplicable in the digital world has enormous value.
— Eric Schmidt, Former CEO of Google

Keep Exploring: Essential Reading

This site is a living document — updated as new research and insights emerge. The goal is not to tell you what to think, but to present the evidence and let you reason through it.

The Changing World Order
Ray Dalio · 2021
The definitive macro framework for understanding the rise and fall of empires, reserve currencies, and the Big Debt Cycle. Essential historical context.
The Bitcoin Standard
Saifedean Ammous · 2018
The economic case for Bitcoin as sound money, tracing the history of money and explaining why sound money matters for civilization.
Layered Money
Nik Bhatia · 2021
How money works in layers — from gold to dollars to Bitcoin — and why Bitcoin's architecture mirrors the most durable monetary systems in history.

Bibliography & Sources

All claims and statistics on this site are drawn from the primary sources listed below. Where data is estimated or approximated, that is noted in the relevant section. The goal is intellectual honesty — follow the links and read the primary sources yourself.

Books
  1. 1
    Dalio, Ray. Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order: Why Nations Succeed and Fail. Simon & Schuster, 2021. — Primary source for the reserve currency cycle data and Big Debt Cycle framework.
    ↗ principles.com/the-changing-world-order/
  2. 2
    Alden, Lyn. Broken Money: Why Our Financial System Is Failing Us and How We Can Make It Better. Timestamp Press, 2023. — Primary source for the monetary history, Cantillon Effect, fiscal dominance, and Bitcoin analysis in Section 3.
    ↗ lynalden.com/broken-money/
  3. 3
    Reinhart, Carmen M. & Kenneth S. Rogoff. This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly. Princeton University Press, 2009. — Historical data on sovereign debt crises and default patterns referenced in Section 2.
    ↗ press.princeton.edu
  4. 4
    Ammous, Saifedean. The Bitcoin Standard: The Decentralized Alternative to Central Banking. Wiley, 2018. — Primary source for the stock-to-flow framework, Roman denarius debasement, Yap Island stone money, Weimar hyperinflation data, and the sound money / civilization argument. Also referenced in Section 4 (Why Bitcoin) and Section 5 (History of Debasement).
    ↗ saifedean.com/thebitcoinstandard/
  5. 4b
    Ammous, Saifedean. The Fiat Standard: The Debt Slavery Alternative to Human Civilization. Saifedean.com, 2021. — Primary source for the "What Changed in 1971" section: US debt 90x increase, global M2 growth rates, post-1971 dietary data, and the "fiat mining" framework.
    ↗ saifedean.com/thefiatstandard/
  6. 4c
    Bhatia, Nik. Layered Money: From Gold and Dollars to Bitcoin and Central Bank Digital Currencies. Self-published, 2021. — Primary source for the "Layered Money" section: gold florin history, Bank of Amsterdam, Bank of England, FDR gold confiscation mechanics, Bretton Woods delegate count, Nixon Shock $22B outflow, and Bitcoin as first-layer settlement money.
    ↗ nikbhatia.me/layered-money
  7. 4d
    Rothbard, Murray N. Anatomy of the State. Mises Institute, 1974 (originally 1965). — Source for the five "command posts" of state power (including money), the argument that central banking serves to finance government deficits and cartelize commercial banks, and the "inflation as hidden tax" framing.
    ↗ mises.org/library/anatomy-state (free PDF)
  8. 5
    Cantillon, Richard. Essay on the Nature of Commerce in General (Essai sur la Nature du Commerce en Général). Written c. 1730, published 1755. Translated by Henry Higgs, 1931. — Original articulation of what is now called the "Cantillon Effect."
  9. 6
    Nakamoto, Satoshi. "Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System." 2008. — Original whitepaper establishing Bitcoin's design, fixed supply, and proof-of-work mechanism.
    ↗ bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdf
US Government & Federal Reserve Data
  1. 7
    Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). "Federal Debt: Total Public Debt as Percent of Gross Domestic Product." Series: GFDEGDQ188S. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. — Primary source for the US Debt-to-GDP chart and ratio figures.
    ↗ fred.stlouisfed.org/series/GFDEGDQ188S
  2. 8
    Congressional Budget Office (CBO). The Budget and Economic Outlook: 2024 to 2034. February 2024. — Source for interest cost, deficit figures, and debt projections in Section 2.
    ↗ cbo.gov/topics/budget/federal-debt
  3. 9
    Congressional Budget Office (CBO). "Monthly Budget Review: Summary for Fiscal Year 2024." November 2024. — Source for FY2024 deficit of ~$1.8T.
    ↗ cbo.gov/publication/60039
  4. 10
    US Treasury, Bureau of the Fiscal Service. "Debt to the Penny." — Source for the $36.2T national debt figure.
    ↗ fiscaldata.treasury.gov
  5. 11
    US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Consumer Price Index (CPI) Historical Data and Inflation Calculator, 1913–present. — Source for the ~97% dollar purchasing power decline since 1913 and ~87% since 1971.
    ↗ bls.gov — CPI Inflation Calculator
International Data
  1. 12
    International Monetary Fund (IMF). World Economic Outlook Database, October 2024. — Source for international debt-to-GDP comparisons (Japan, Greece, UK) in Section 2.
    ↗ imf.org — WEO Database
  2. 13
    World Bank. Global Findex Database 2021: Financial Inclusion, Digital Payments, and Resilience in the Age of COVID-19. 2022. — Source for the ~1.4 billion unbanked adults statistic.
    ↗ worldbank.org/en/publication/globalfindex
Economic Data
  1. 13a
    Economic Policy Institute (EPI). "The Productivity–Pay Gap." Updated regularly. — Source for the 1979–2020 productivity (+61%) vs. hourly compensation (+17.5%) divergence data cited in the "After 1971" section.
    ↗ epi.org/productivity-pay-gap/
  2. 13b
    Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). "Personal Saving Rate." Series: PSAVERT. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. — Source for the US personal savings rate decline from ~13% (early 1970s) to ~4% (2024) in the savings rate chart.
    ↗ fred.stlouisfed.org/series/PSAVERT
  3. 13c
    Chetty, Raj, David Grusky, Maximilian Hell, Nathaniel Hendren, Robert Manduca, and Jimmy Narang. "The Fading American Dream: Trends in Absolute Income Mobility Since 1940." Science, Vol. 356, 2017. — Source for the intergenerational mobility statistic: young adults earning more than their parents fell from ~90% (early 1970s cohort) to ~50% (1980s cohort).
    ↗ opportunityinsights.org
  4. 13d
    World Gold Council. Gold Supply Data — Annual mine production and estimated above-ground stocks. — Source for gold's stock-to-flow ratio (~60x) and annual supply growth rate (~1.5%) used in the stock-to-flow property card.
    ↗ gold.org/goldhub/data/gold-supply
  5. 13e
    Furness, William Henry III. The Island of Stone Money: Uap of the Carolines. J. B. Lippincott, 1910. — Original ethnographic account of the Yap Island Rai stone monetary system and the role of David O'Keefe in its collapse.
    ↗ archive.org (free full text)
Bitcoin Data & Network
  1. 14
    Bitnodes.io. "Global Bitcoin Nodes Distribution." Real-time network node statistics. — Source for the ~17,000+ reachable full node count.
    ↗ bitnodes.io
  2. 15
    Clark Moody. Bitcoin Dashboard. Real-time Bitcoin network metrics, uptime, and blockchain statistics.
    ↗ bitcoin.clarkmoody.com/dashboard/
  3. 16
    mempool.space. Bitcoin blockchain explorer and transaction tracker. Open-source, self-hostable Bitcoin block explorer. — Source for verifying Bitcoin's auditable supply and transaction history.
    ↗ mempool.space
Historical Records
  1. 17
    Miller Center, University of Virginia. "August 15, 1971: Address to the Nation on the Economy" (Nixon Shock). Presidential Speeches archive.
    ↗ millercenter.org