Bitcoin's Pursuit of a Monetary Standard

marsbit發佈於 2026-02-04更新於 2026-02-04

文章摘要

The article "Bitcoin's Pursuit of a Monetary Standard" by Thejaswini M A, based on a reading of Saifedean Ammous' "The Bitcoin Standard," explores the concept of money as a technology for transferring value across time, space, and scale. It emphasizes "salability" and introduces the critical idea of "hardness"—money whose supply is difficult to increase. The author reviews historical examples of money, such as Yap's Rai Stones, African Aggry beads, and wampum, which all lost value when their supply was easily expanded by new technology or trade. Precious metals, particularly gold, emerged as superior due to their scarcity and high stock-to-flow ratio. The critique then shifts to government-issued fiat currency, arguing it represents an unbacked, easily inflated system that erodes savings and leads to economic instability. While acknowledging the book's persuasive framework and its effective use of historical anecdotes, the author remains unconvinced by its one-sided, Austrian economics-influenced narrative that blames fiat for modern societal ills. The key takeaway is a new perspective on evaluating any asset: to critically ask how easily new units can be created and to be wary of anyone who can print money faster than one can earn it.

Written by: Thejaswini M A

Compiled by: Block unicorn

I've always wanted to slowly study "The Bitcoin Standard"—read it from start to finish and see how it affects my thinking. It often appears in the background of many Bitcoin discussions, revered as a foundational work. People would say, "As Saifedean explained..." and then you realize that everything they're referencing is based on a meme or a cover screenshot.

So, I will read this book in its entirety, divided into three parts. This is the first part.

We are still in the early chapters and haven't reached the later sections that fully critique fiat money for ruining everything from architecture to waistlines. For now, Saifedean Ammous is laying the groundwork, trying to convince you that money is a technology, that some forms of money are "harder" than others, and that history is essentially a process of continuous selection, with the harder options ultimately prevailing. If he can make you understand this, Bitcoin will then emerge as the "hardest money to date," and you'll feel it's inevitable.

I'm not entirely convinced yet, but I must admit it's a tricky framework.

The book begins by stripping money of its romanticized veneer, revealing its core essence. It is not a "social contract," nor a "product of the state," but simply a tool for transferring value across time and space, something people don't need to think too much about every day.

Ammous repeatedly emphasizes the concept of "Salability." A good monetary asset should be easily sold anytime, anywhere, without significant loss. To be salable, it must meet three conditions: across space—so you can carry it with you and use it to exchange for what you need; across time—so it doesn't rot or collapse in value; and across scale—so it can be used for any purpose, from a cup of tea to a house, without needing a calculator or a large bag of change.

Next, the book's truly decisive word appears: hardness. Hard money is money whose supply is difficult to increase. Soft money is easy to print. This is the essence. The core logic is simple: Why would you store your life's work in something that others can easily create?

You can feel the influence of the Austrian School of Economics in every sentence, but once you strip away the ideology, the book leaves you with a very useful question: If I invest my savings in X, how easy is it for others to earn more X?

Once you view your life through this lens—whether it's rupees, dollars, stablecoins, Bitcoin, or any other monetary combination—it's hard to ignore.

After setting up this framework, the book takes you on a tour of a small "Museum of Broken Money."

The first exhibit is Yap Island and its Rai Stones. These huge circular limestone discs, some weighing up to four tons, were quarried from other islands and arduously transported to Yap. Ammous writes that this worked surprisingly well for centuries. The stones were bulky and difficult to move or steal. Everyone in the village knew which stone belonged to whom. Payment was made by announcing the change of ownership to the community. The stones were "easily salable anywhere on the island" because they were known everywhere on the island; they also stood the test of time because the cost of obtaining new stones was so high that the existing stock was always far greater than the new supply that could be produced in a given period... The stock-to-flow ratio of Rai stones was very high."

Then, technology arrived.

In 1871, an Irish-American captain named David O'Keefe was shipwrecked on Yap Island. After recovering, he left and later returned with a large ship and explosives, realizing he could quarry Rai stones in large quantities using modern tools. The villagers were divided. The chief deemed his stones "too easy" to produce, banned their quarrying, and insisted that only traditional stones counted. Others disagreed and began quarrying the newly discovered stones. Conflict ensued. The stones' use as money gradually faded. Today, they are mostly used for ceremonial purposes.

It's a neat, perhaps overly neat, parable. But it makes a point: once a monetary commodity loses its hardness (once someone can produce it cheaply and in large quantities), those who once held it end up subsidizing later arrivals.

Beads and shells followed the same pattern. West Africa's Aggry Beads were valuable because they were scarce and time-consuming to make. Later, European merchants began importing them in large quantities from glass factories. Ammous describes how this importation "slowly but surely" turned them from "hard money" into "cheap money," "undermining their salability and causing the purchasing power of these beads in the hands of African owners to decline over time, ultimately impoverishing them as their wealth was transferred to the Europeans, who could now easily obtain the beads."

Cowrie shells and wampum experienced similar trajectories. They were initially scarce hard money, difficult to obtain, with high stock-to-flow ratios. Later, with the advent of industrial ships, "their supply expanded dramatically, causing their value to decline and their salability to be lost over time." and by 1661, they had lost their status as legal tender.

You'll find stories of cattle, salt, tally sticks, and cigarettes in prisoner-of-war camps. Each story does the same thing: trains your intuition to feel that if the supply of new units can suddenly be greatly increased at very low cost, then the stock held by savers is essentially making a donation.

You could criticize these historical narratives as being too tidy. There's little mention of violence, politics, or culture in these small stories. Everyone acts like a hyper-rational economic actor with perfect memory. But as a means of making you suspicious of easily printed money, it works.

After you're thoroughly horrified by shells and beads, metals emerge as the mature solution.

Metals solved many salability problems. They didn't spoil like grain. They were more portable than巨石. They could be minted into uniform coins, making pricing and accounting easier. Over time, gold and silver ultimately prevailed because they were the most resistant to inflation. The annual mining output only increased the existing stock by a small fraction, so no single miner could devalue everyone's savings.

Thus began the long era of metallic money, and later, gold-backed paper money. The book doesn't dwell too much on these details. Its purpose is to make you feel that once humans discovered gold, they found a near-perfect money: portable, durable, divisible, and most importantly, expensive to produce.

You'll later see how this sets the stage for Bitcoin's emergence. If you fully accept the notion that "given the physical and metallurgical conditions of the time, gold was the best substance we could make," then "Bitcoin is digital gold with even greater hardness" sounds logical.

What interests me is that in this section, gold is portrayed less as a mystical object and more as a clever workaround to physical limitations. If you imagine ancient societies as constantly trying to answer the question, "How do we preserve the fruits of a harvest or a voyage in a form that can be passed down to future generations?" then gold is a relatively clever, albeit imperfect, yet reasonable answer.

This framework also benefits Bitcoin. It is no longer "magic internet money," but rather "another attempt to solve the same problem with new tools."

The book hasn't reached that point yet, but you can feel the runway being laid.

Then, government money enters the scene as the villain.

So far, monetary collapses have stemmed from external factors. New technology emerged, breaking the rigidity of the monetary system, leaving savers with nothing. Now, the villain comes from within: governments and central banks have the legal authority to print money without any scarce commodity to back it.

In this narrative, fiat money is the product of governments realizing they could completely separate monetary symbols from real assets. The monetary unit was retained, but the constraints were removed. Governments told people their paper money had value because the law said so, because taxes had to be paid with it, not because it was backed by any physical asset.

Under a gold or silver standard, money could be devalued or debased, but you didn't get Zimbabwe-style collapses where wages became worthless within months. But under a fiat system, this can happen. And some governments have indeed done it repeatedly.

Ammous spends considerable time explaining the social consequences of this phenomenon. To survive, people are forced to sell capital, and productive activity is eroded. Long-term contracts break down because no one trusts them. Political extremism thrives amidst anger and chaos. Weimar Germany is a prime example. Monetary collapse is just the precursor to worse things.

It's not wrong that most fiat currencies depreciate against physical goods over the long term. This is somewhat by design of the monetary system.

Where my mind starts to push back against the book is not the facts themselves, but its framing. Almost all the ills of modern society are blamed on the fiat monetary system. Central banks are portrayed almost entirely as tools that secretly tax savers to subsidize borrowers. Any benefits of having a flexible lender of last resort are downplayed as "but they will abuse it," which has some truth, but it's not the only question society must answer.

Even if you don't like central banks, the idea that "the entire twentieth century was a mistake from the moment we abandoned the full metal standard" feels a bit extreme.

What impressed me

So, beyond adding more quotable classics to the timeline, what practical impact did Part One actually have on me?

Strangely, it didn't make me more convinced about Bitcoin. It just clarified a question I hadn't asked carefully enough before.

I rarely look at my money the way Ammous does. I consider risk and returns, volatility, how much time I'm willing to put into crypto versus boring things. I don't systematically sit down and scrutinize who can print how much of each crypto I handle and under what rules.

Then I saw a Bloomberg chart showing the S&P 500 not priced in dollars, but in gold. It's so unfair. Priced in gold, the US stock market is back to where it was over a decade ago, in the post-global financial crisis era. All those dollar-denominated all-time highs, all the post-pandemic frenzy, are just noise on a flat line.

Once you understand this, it's hard to ignore the simple truth Ammous has been hammering home: performance is always "performance relative to what?" If your base unit is slowly depreciating, even if your index hits new highs, your performance in harder units might still be stagnant.

I realize the book leaves out a lot. It barely seriously discusses credit as a social tool, nor does it mention that states don't just destroy money; they also create the legal and military environments that allow markets to flourish. It doesn't delve into the idea that some groups might sacrifice some economic strength for greater resilience to shocks. Everything revolves around one core: are the savers' interests being diluted?

Maybe that's the point. It's a polemic, not a textbook. But I don't want to pretend it's the whole truth.

For now, I'm happy to treat it as a perspective, not a creed. Whenever I see a central bank's balance sheet, a new secondary bond issuance plan, or some "stable yield" product promising 18% returns in dollars, a Saifedean-esque voice echoes in my ear: How hard is this money really? And how many O'Keefes are already in the water with dynamite?

For now, I just want to remember this: money stores our future choices. Choose your monetary unit carefully, and be wary of anyone who can print more than you earn.

相關問答

QWhat is the core concept of 'hard money' as described in the book 'The Bitcoin Standard'?

AHard money refers to a form of currency that is difficult to increase in supply, making it resistant to inflation and devaluation. It contrasts with 'soft money,' which can be easily created or printed.

QHow did the introduction of modern technology disrupt the Rai Stone monetary system on Yap Island?

AModern technology, such as ships and explosives brought by David O'Keefe, made it easier to mine and transport Rai Stones. This led to an oversupply, devaluing the existing stones and ultimately causing the collapse of their use as money.

QWhat is 'salability' in the context of money, and what are its three dimensions?

ASalability refers to the ease with which a monetary asset can be sold without significant loss. Its three dimensions are: across space (portability), across time (durability and resistance to decay), and across scale (divisibility for transactions of any size).

QWhy does the author argue that fiat money is problematic compared to commodity-based money like gold?

AFiat money is problematic because it can be easily printed by governments and central banks without any backing by scarce commodities. This leads to devaluation, loss of purchasing power, and economic instability, as seen in historical hyperinflation episodes like Weimar Germany.

QWhat historical examples does the book use to illustrate the downfall of previously 'hard' currencies?

AThe book uses examples like Rai Stones on Yap Island, Aggry beads in West Africa, and wampum shells, which were initially scarce and hard to produce but lost their value when technological advances or industrial methods made them easy to mass-produce.

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什麼是 $BITCOIN

數字黃金 ($BITCOIN):全面分析 數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 介紹 數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 是一個基於區塊鏈的項目,運行於 Solana 網絡,旨在將傳統貴金屬的特徵與去中心化技術的創新相結合。雖然它與比特幣同名,常被稱為「數字黃金」,因其被視為價值儲存工具,但數字黃金是一個獨立的代幣,旨在於 Web3 生態系統中創造一個獨特的生態系。其目標是將自己定位為一個可行的替代數字資產,儘管有關其應用和功能的具體細節仍在發展中。 什麼是數字黃金 ($BITCOIN)? 數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 是一個專門為 Solana 區塊鏈設計的加密貨幣代幣。與比特幣提供廣泛認可的價值儲存角色不同,這個代幣似乎更專注於更廣泛的應用和特徵。值得注意的方面包括: 區塊鏈基礎設施:該代幣建立在 Solana 區塊鏈上,以其處理高速和低成本交易的能力而聞名。 供應動態:數字黃金的最大供應量上限為 100 萬兆代幣(100P $BITCOIN),儘管有關其流通供應的詳細信息目前尚未披露。 實用性:雖然具體功能尚未明確說明,但有跡象表明該代幣可能被用於各種應用,可能涉及去中心化應用(dApps)或資產代幣化策略。 誰是數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 的創建者? 目前,數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 的創建者和開發團隊的身份仍然是 未知 的。這種情況在許多創新項目中是典型的,特別是那些與去中心化金融和迷因幣現象相關的項目。雖然這種匿名性可能促進社區驅動的文化,但也加劇了對治理和問責制的擔憂。 誰是數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 的投資者? 可用的信息顯示,數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 沒有任何已知的機構支持者或知名的風險投資。該項目似乎運行在一個以社區支持和採用為重點的點對點模型上,而不是傳統的資金籌集途徑。其活動和流動性主要位於去中心化交易所(DEXs),如 PumpSwap,而不是已建立的集中交易平台,進一步突顯其草根方法。 數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 如何運作 數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 的運作機制可以根據其區塊鏈設計和網絡特徵進行詳細說明: 共識機制:通過利用 Solana 的獨特歷史證明(PoH)結合權益證明(PoS)模型,該項目確保高效的交易驗證,促進網絡的高性能。 代幣經濟學:雖然具體的通縮機制尚未詳細說明,但巨大的最大代幣供應量暗示它可能適合微交易或尚待定義的利基用例。 互操作性:存在與 Solana 更廣泛生態系統的整合潛力,包括各種去中心化金融(DeFi)平台。然而,關於具體整合的詳細信息仍未明確。 重要事件時間表 以下是關於數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 的重要里程碑時間表: 2023:該代幣首次在 Solana 區塊鏈上部署,並以其合約地址為標誌。 2024:數字黃金獲得曝光,因其在去中心化交易所如 PumpSwap 上可供交易,允許用戶以 SOL 進行交易。 2025:該項目見證了零星的交易活動和社區主導參與的潛在興趣,儘管截至目前尚未記錄到任何顯著的合作夥伴關係或技術進展。 關鍵分析 優勢 可擴展性:基於 Solana 的基礎設施支持高交易量,這可能增強 $BITCOIN 在各種交易場景中的實用性。 可及性:每個代幣潛在的低交易價格可能吸引零售投資者,促進更廣泛的參與,因為存在分割所有權的機會。 風險 缺乏透明度:缺乏公眾已知的支持者、開發者或審計過程可能引發對該項目可持續性和可信度的懷疑。 市場波動性:交易活動在很大程度上依賴於投機行為,這可能導致價格波動和投資者的不確定性。 結論 數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 在快速發展的 Solana 生態系統中,作為一個引人入勝但模糊的項目出現。雖然它試圖利用「數字黃金」的敘事,但其與比特幣作為價值儲存工具的既定角色的脫離,突顯了對其預期實用性和治理結構更清晰區分的需求。未來的接受度和採用率可能取決於解決當前的不透明性,並更明確地定義其運營和經濟策略。 注意:本報告涵蓋截至 2023 年 10 月的綜合信息,並且在研究期間可能發生了進展。

83 人學過發佈於 2025.05.13更新於 2025.05.13

什麼是 $BITCOIN

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