Not often that one gets to digest a well written piece by a traditional banker on something non traditional (one could argue a stable coin is still very fiat).
Not sure shin's argument still holds for L2s, but then again, I'm not sure what's the business model of a LN node relaying RGB or Taro entails, other than collecting routing fees.
Sorry can't quote, I closed the article and suddenly I'm behind the paywall.
Ok, now i can. Here is the link: https://archive.is/etL9k#selection-56815.0-56815.294
And here is the quote.
What about so-called layer two chains, which move transactions off the base-layer network to promise faster processing and lower fees? Shin argues they don’t share a common liquidity pool or settlement mechanism, and so they’re basically fragmentation agents in the same way as new blockchains.
I am reminded of two things:
First, Szabo's "Money, Blockchains, and Social Scalability" where he makes the distinction between technological scalability and social scalability. Sure, fees go up when lots of people use a chain, but I think Shin is probably ignoring a similar pressure in centralized banking: regulators seem to tend to want to increase regulation which drives people toward the least regulated means of transacting. Shin's own BIS acknowledged this in a recent paper (#1450816). Szabo's paper is interesting to put into juxtaposition with Shin's:
Second, Voskuil's "Utility Threshold Property" where he argues that
Shin says
But I think that the fragmentation of liquidity that Shin finds so troubling also exists in traditional finance: I may be able to pay with Visa or Mastercard, but those are effectively separate systems. The only reason they work well together is that we have decades of building infrastructure around them.
here is archive since most of us won't spend a fucking penny of FT: https://archive.vn/etL9k
Here is a short video and transcript on stable coins by John Cochrane, Hoover Institute (Hoover has more cred than fucking FT)
https://www.thefreedomfrequency.org/p/are-stablecoins-really-stable
Cochrane thinks stablecoins are a great idea (not a new idea)