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rule of law.
Four years ago, I was in Ghana for a small consulting project.
I was there with a group of five or six others. During our couple-week stay there, we got to talk business, soak in the culture, eat some crazy food, and generally experience life in a brand new way.
It was an incredible adventure, and in retrospect, I think a very formative experience in my journey down the Bitcoin rabbit hole.
Money is breaking in Ghana.
The country is technically no longer "third-world" -- its GDP is on the rise, yet its currency is headed the opposite direction.
When I was in Ghana -- much less aware of the nature of money -- I learned that my purchasing power shot up 5x simply because I was holding onto dollars. I was feeling like a king. But at the same time, this immediately highlighted the struggle of the average Ghanian's financial life to me; What did I do to deserve 5x as much wealth -- just because I'm from another country?
And just four years later, my purchasing power is now 12x greater relative to the Cedi.
When a nation's money breaks, so does its law enforcement.
And as Jeff Booth recently explained with George Gammon on WBD, money is superordinate to law.
A 3-4 hour trip on the highways of the USA translates to about a ~13 hour journey in Ghana. I know that because we had to make that journey ourselves -- traveling from the center of the country down to Cape Coast.
Anyways, In two separate occasions during that roadtrip, our mini-van was pulled over for "traffic violations." But the officers had zero interest in enforcing rule of law -- they wanted to get bribed.
And bribed them we did. We bribed, exchanged a few jokes with the officer, and were let off the hook just fine, each time.
It just goes to show that without proper incentives, a country has no foundation. No rules to work with, and thus no competition. How are you expected to play chess if the rules change arbitrarily all the time?
Infrastructure doesn't get built, goods and services can't move freely, stagnation overwhelms.
Lack of good money has countless seemingly "unrelated" downstream effects, and as stronger currencies like the USD continue to move closer to that of the Cedi, this'll only become more clear to the world, I'm betting.
So that being said...what else do nations lack when good money is nowhere to be found?
money is superordinate to law
Love this.
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Yeah, that's a great way to describe it. Really enjoyed that podcast. Jeff did a great job.
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I wasn't to familiar with George. I think his biggest hangup on bitcoin isnt bitcoin. Its the state. I beleive he is overestimating its strength long term. He sounds like a minarcrist to me though. I found myself agreeing with him short term. Maybe we dont see significant change for 20 years but further out than that I dont see the US and the dollar holding their dominance. Truth is, no one knows. But, history has shown us things do change and radically.
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Yea i felt the same about george. We are obviously biased, but roman empires never last forever!
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Exactly.
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...good books!
Good read, thank You.
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thank you for reading :)
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Without good or actually hard money, people won't be able to save and thus they will speculate.
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Without good money ā€...society won't be able to perform economic calculation in order to determine how goods should be deployed in society for productive uses.ā€ ā€” Trace Mayer
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Hyperbitcoinization will happen when bitcoin becomes the preferred money for bribes.
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will happily take btc for bribe ser šŸ«” for adoption
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honest exchange of value
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Predictable future.
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They're penetrating to Ghana and similar countries with money. Who they are? Emperial countries. (US, UK, FR, GER, even Belgium). I don't think this is related to money choices. It is related to money abundance. If they would use Bitcoin then it will be the same situation. Money owns the nations leaders. If their characters open to bribery.
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21 sats \ 1 reply \ @mo 1 Oct 2023
Thanks for sharing, really interesting. I believe everything reflect itself somehow, and you right
without proper incentives, a country has no foundation.
but I believe it applies at the country level, as well at a personal level too
Without proper incentives, a wo/man has no foundation.
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Absolutely. Applies at every level.
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Seems like the lack respect for peoples time and energy
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Bad money discourages low time preference. It encourages low time preference activities including dishonesty and theft. Of course these also exist in a hard money society but they aren't encouraged in the same way.
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think u meant high time preference in the 2nd sentence haha but yes i agree, good money is all about the incentives it provides, hard money happens to incentivize more positive long term behavior
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Yep, need coffee
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Amazing how a trustless system like Bitcoin keeps all the stakeholders in line n incentivised. Enjoyed the read
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trustless governance šŸ™Œ
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The ability to tap into energy and labour potential in your region, if you have shit money and its more effected by political will and pushing it into what they think is right, and the market has less say, you get to a point where its better to rebuild the minister's house every year then go out mine gold, or extract other resources
As for people, they learn skills that make them useful to the political elite and not skills that the market needs and then you end up with a skills shortage
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I am kind of surprise reading this, because Ghana cedis has value compare to my country currency. Anyways, I list faith in government issued money long time ago. For me I believe the new order which is Bitcoin.
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stackers have outlawed this. turn on wild west mode in your /settings to see outlawed content.
deleted by author
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a musician over there wanted some help getting his recording biz up and running
How I found myself in a position to help out there is still mysterious to me loll