The Case Against CBDCs In A Capitalist Society: Banks Won’t Be Happy

CBDCs, a bank vault

The Bitcoin Policy Institute’s report on CBDCs makes a strong case for why the US should reject a centrally issued version of the dollar. Bitcoinist covered that already. This time, we’ll focus on the reasons why The Bitcoin Policy Institute thinks CBDCs don’t make sense and are not practical for capitalist societies. The main argument is that a CBDC would obsolete banks, and banks won’t allow that. So, the question is, how influential are banks in state policy?

Mind you, this time The Bitcoin Policy Institute’s case is even stronger. And we won’t mention China even once.

The Delicate Relationship Between CBDCs And Banks

To set up the scene, The Bitcoin Policy Institute’s report goes to why central banks are against bitcoin:

BTC price chart for 09/29/2022 on Bitstamp | Source: BTC/USD on TradingView.com

Under a bitcoin standard, central banks are obsoleted. On the other hand, if the US creates a CBDC they would be kings of the castle. The center of the whole system. Which sounds good to them, until you include the private banks’ factor. 

The first question is, will private banks go out without a fight? The second one is, would a CBDC standard also wipe out the whole financial system? What happens to lending and borrowing, for example? Are central banks equipped to absorb every service that commercial banks offer? The whole situation brings to mind that classic Mr. Robot scene that has been making the rounds on Twitter lately:

Does The End Of Cash Mean The End Of Privacy?

Putting aside how ineffective KYC and AML procedures are in actually preventing crimes, there’s the fact that privacy is a human right. And, as The Bitcoin Policy Institute puts it, “those calling for the rollout of a CBDC are naïve to believe that this can be done without establishing a centralized surveillance system for all financial transacting.” The function is so trivial to add that it would be an element of CBDCs whether we want it or not.

Government people tout this as some kind of victory and play it like it will help them prevent crime. The fact of the matter is, they don’t want that kind of power. They think they do, but they don’t. Privacy is absolutely necessary for freedom to exist. And there’s already a lack of financial privacy as it is. Not only that, “as governments worldwide routinely share data with one another, individual transaction data will quickly become known to any government in a data sharing arrangement.”

The Technological Element To CDBCs

Slightly switching topics, The Bitcoin Policy Institute presents another obstacle to CBDCs. This one would be hard to admit for governments everywhere, but It does make all the sense in the world.

Are governments going to become technology providers all of a sudden? While at the same time absorbing all of the commercial banks’ functions? That just doesn’t seem feasible. And the affected institutions won’t take it sitting down. Are CBDCs a pipe dream then? Maybe they are.

Featured Image by Brock Wegner on Unsplash  | Charts by TradingView

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