Welcome to Opinionated, a new podcast featuring CoinDeskâs leading columnists and contributors.
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Iâm your host, Ben Schiller, CoinDeskâs opinion editor.
On this weekâs show, weâre joined by Nic Carter, cofounder of Coin Metrics and partner at Castle Island Ventures.
Nic discusses this yearâs $20 billion surge in USD-backed stablecoins (what he calls âcrypto-dollarsâ) and the potentially enormous implications of an offshore dollarization system based on blockchain.
Fiat-backed stablecoins are ânot what Satoshi intended,â Carter says, but their âpreposterousâ growth this year is the âthe most important phenomenon in the industry.â
âIt not only tells us about the maturation of the crypto financial infrastructure. It also tells us a lot about current geopolitics, too,â he says.
Nic has written two op-eds for CoinDesk about crypto-dollars:
"Policymakers Shouldn't Fear Digital Money: So Far It's Maintaining the Dollar's Status" (from February)
and
"The Crypto-Dollar Surge and the American Opportunity" (this month).
U.S. policymakers fear losing power as dollar-flows increasingly shift to stablecoins.
Central bankers may have less ability to set interest rates. And the corresponding banking infrastructure, based largely in New York, will process fewer transactions as people move into assets like tether and USDC instead.
Nonetheless, Carter says the U.S. should embrace this new form of money technology.
One, itâs mostly, for now, a U.S. industry, and overwhelmingly pegged to dollars. More dollars in circulation, while not necessarily good for American workers, is good for the dollarâs reserve currency status.
Two, blockchains are inherently neutral â âequal opportunity databasesâ that donât exclude people and represent financial freedom. That ought to accord with American values.
And third, if the U.S. doesnât sanction stablecoin transactions, some other country or company will, inviting in the threat of surveillance and a loss of power anyway. âThe U.S. should consider embracing a neutral alternative to the highly politicized New York corresponding banking system before itâs too late and whole tranches of its allies defect to a Chinese or a Russian system,â Carter says.
Nic had a lot more to say about stablecoins, the future of money and great power rivalry. Check it out here, and please subscribe to CoinDeskâs new podcast feed.
For free, early access to Opinionated, subscribe to CoinDesk Reports with Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, CastBox or direct RSS for your favorite podcast player.