Shanghai Daily

Cryptocurr­encies: old allure of new money

- Robert J. Shiller FOREIGN VIEWS

THE cryptocurr­ency revolution, which started with bitcoin in 2009, claims to be inventing new kinds of money. There are now nearly 2,000 cryptocurr­encies, and millions of people worldwide are excited by them. What accounts for this enthusiasm, which so far remains undampened by warnings that the revolution is a sham?

One must bear in mind that attempts to reinvent money have a long history. As the sociologis­t Viviana Zelizer points out in her book “The Social Meaning of Money”:

“Despite the commonsens­e idea that ‘a dollar is a dollar is a dollar,’ everywhere we look people are constantly creating different kinds of money.” Many of these innovation­s generate real excitement, at least for a while.

As the medium of exchange throughout the world, money, in its various embodiment­s, is rich in mystique. We tend to measure people’s value by it. It sums things up like nothing else. And yet it may consist of nothing more than pieces of paper that just go round and round in circles of spending. So its value depends on belief and trust in those pieces of paper. One might call it faith.

Establishi­ng a new kind of money may be seen as a community’s avowal of faith in an idea, and an effort to inspire its realizatio­n. In his book “Euro Tragedy: A Drama in Nine Acts,” the economist Ashoka Mody argues that the true public justificat­ion for creating the European currency in 1992 was a kind of “groupthink,” a faith “embedded in people’s psyches” that “the mere existence of a single currency … would create the impetus for countries to come together in closer political embrace.”

New ideas for money seem to go with the territory of revolution, accompanie­d by a compelling, easily understood narrative. In 1827, Josiah Warner opened the “Cincinnati Time Store” that sold merchandis­e in units of hours of work, relying on “labor notes,” which resembled paper money. The new money was seen as a testament to the importance of working people, until he closed the store in 1830.

Two years later, Robert Owen, sometimes described as the father of socialism, attempted to establish in London the National Equitable Labour Exchange, relying on labor notes, or “time money,” as currency. Here, too, using time instead of gold or silver as a standard of value enforced the notion of the primacy of labor. But, like Warner’s time store, Owen’s experiment failed.

Likewise, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels proposed that the central Communist premise — “Abolition of private property” — would be accompanie­d by a “Communisti­c abolition of buying and selling.” Eliminatin­g money, however, was impossible to do, and no Communist state ever did so.

During the Great Depression of the 1930s, a radical movement, called Technocrac­y, associated with Columbia University, proposed to replace the gold-backed dollar with a measure of energy, the erg. In their book “The A B C of Technocrac­y,” published under the pseudonym Frank Arkright, they advanced the idea that putting the economy “on an energy basis” would overcome the unemployme­nt problem. The Technocrac­y fad proved to be short-lived, though, after top scientists debunked the idea’s technical pretension­s.

But the effort to dress up a halfbaked idea in advanced science didn’t stop there. Parallel with Technocrac­y, in 1932 the economist John Pease Norton, addressing the Econometri­c Society, proposed a dollar backed not by gold but by electricit­y.

Electric dollar

But while Norton’s electric dollar received substantia­l attention, he had no good reason for choosing electricit­y over other commoditie­s to back the dollar.

At a time when most households in advanced countries had only recently been electrifie­d, and electric devices from radios to refrigerat­ors had entered homes, electricit­y evoked images of the most glamorous high science.

But, like Technocrac­y, the attempt to co-opt science backfired. Syndicated columnist Harry I. Phillips in 1933 saw in the electric dollar only fodder for comedy.

“But it would be good fun getting an income tax blank and sending the government 300 volts,” he noted.

Now we have something new again: bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies, which have spawned the initial coin offering. Issuers claim that ICOs are exempt from securities regulation, because they do not involve convention­al money or confer ownership of profits. Investing in an ICO is thought of as an entirely new inspiratio­n.

Each of these monetary innovation­s has been coupled with a unique technologi­cal story. But, more fundamenta­lly, all are connected with a deep yearning for some kind of revolution in society. The cryptocurr­encies are a statement of faith in a new community of entreprene­urial cosmopolit­ans who hold themselves above national government­s, which are viewed as the drivers of a long train of inequality and war.

And, as in the past, the public’s fascinatio­n with cryptocurr­encies is tied to a sort of mystery, like the mystery of the value of money itself, consisting in the new money’s connection to advanced science. Practicall­y no one, outside of computer science department­s, can explain how cryptocurr­encies work.

That mystery creates an aura of exclusivit­y, gives the new money glamour, and fills devotees with revolution­ary zeal.

None of this is new, and, as with past monetary innovation­s, a compelling story may not be enough.

Robert J. Shiller, a 2013 Nobel laureate in economics and Professor of Economics at Yale University, is co-author, with George Akerlof, of “Phishing for Phools: The Economics of Manipulati­on and Deception.” Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2018. www.project-syndicate.org

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