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Top Alternatives to Paper Money

BitCoinATM

I’ve just left the Liberty Forum in New Hampshire, a three-day gathering of hundreds of people who are trying to find ways of living freer lives in times of despotic control. Among many things, this might be the world center for exhibiting monies of the future.

I leave as the proud owner of three types of nonpaper, nongovernmental monies. They operate in competition with the government’s dollar. Yes, these include Bitcoin, the mind-blowing digital currency that has techno-geeks, edgy global traders, and even the World Bank buzzing about its potential to finally separate money from the state.

Why are people working on alternative forms of money? It’s all about escaping a 100-year-old trend. Back in the day, the dollar was a name for gold, not just a paper ticket manufactured by a government-chartered central bank.

Depression, war, and deliberate debasement have left us with a dollar that is a mere shadow of its former self. It keeps losing value, of course, rather than gaining value as it would in a free market.

Just as critically, the dollar today serves as the enabler of all regulatory control over our economic lives. Using the dollar means dragging a gigantic and burdensome machinery along with you. It means tens of thousands of regulatory controls, government spying, confiscatory taxation, and endless burdens that are bad for businesses and individuals.

Ideally, the dollar would be totally reformed, made good as gold, and restored to its former integrity. How likely is that to happen? The whole idea depends on the wisdom, good will, and public beneficence of the political and elite class of banking moguls.

Is there any wonder that there is a clamor for the private sector to come up with something new? It’s been going on for several decades now, this discovery process we might call “monetary entrepreneurship.”

People in ancient days had to discover the best commodities to get progress beyond mere barter. What would best serve as money: something to acquire not to consume, but to trade for other things to consume? Is it salt? Shells? Silver and gold? Many options are available, and only the best money can win the market competition over time.

Something like this is taking place again today. Government money is risky, carries too much cost, and has an uncertain future to it. People put up with it for convenience and because nothing better seems to present itself.

There is a real opportunity here for monetary entrepreneurs to get to work coming up with something new and letting the markets try it out. Over the last 10 years, governments have shot down a number of experiments in private money that used digital networks to monetize gold and silver. It’s been a brutal job to retain the government’s money monopoly.


Entrepreneurs have learned. New monetary instruments have to protect themselves against government attempts to shoot them down in obvious ways. There are three general ways to do this: back to the basics with precious metals, onward to the future with purely digital money, and some combination of both of these.

My first acquisition is an innovative way to save and spend smaller units of silver. The tiny bars are pretty and clearly mark their weight. Today, each one is worth about $1. In the future they could be worth much more. For daily spending needs for cabs, food, and water, these would work quite well.

It’s true that they are pretty small and might get lost in your pocket. You have to have some pretty nimble fingers to handle them in a hurry. And even young eyes might need reading glasses to discern the weight.


A solution to this problem comes from Shire Silver and entrepreneur Ron Helwig. It’s a simple, but ingenious idea, one he is very anxious to share with others. He takes various strands of gold and silver of many weights and laminates them in a credit-card size monetary instrument.

The result is convenient and easy to carry and spend. He is not the only maker of these cards. Many others are picking up the idea — a fact that makes Mr. Helwig very pleased (he is the last one to attempt to gain a government monopoly through a copyright, patent, or trademark).

Shire Silver cards are commonly accepted all over New Hampshire. But they are in use all over the world. Helwig gets orders from New Zealand, Brazil, and even Japan. Some orders are valued as low as $6, but he receives orders valued at $5,000 too. At the Liberty Forum, he couldn’t keep up with the demand, so he brought his machine to the booth. He even let me make a 1-gram card myself!

Jeffrey Tucker making a Shire Silver card with help from the company’s founder, Ron Helwig.

While I sat at the Shire Silver booth, people were also purchasing cards with Bitcoins. This is the first time I had seen Bitcoins in operation as real money. In fact, most things were available in Bitcoins. Here we have a currency created only in 2009, and already it is making possible global transactions every one or two seconds with someone somewhere in the world.

I downloaded a smartphone application called Blockchain that gave me a wallet of Bitcoins. I’ve been curious about this whole phenomenon, but there is nothing like owning the currency yourself to underscore the point.

I was able to sit and talk with some of the major players in this emergent industry and gain a clearer understanding of what it is and what it is about. As a result, I’m pretty confident that this is the real the thing and has a spectacular future.

I went over to the Bitcoin ATM machine and loaded up while I could. Of course, you can also buy them online (there are many options, but try bitstamp.net or buy them locally from localbitcoins.com), but in person, you can get digits for cash, which is especially nice. The trading relationships between Bitcoin and government currency are always in operation, so there is never a doubt about the value of your portfolio.

A year ago, there were more skeptics than there are today. And this is because the market is expanding. There are websites that accept only Bitcoins, such as Silk Road. I also met many people who are paid their normal salaries almost exclusively in Bitcoins. There are companies planning to go public in Bitcoins, which thereby means completely bypassing the SEC and the whole regulatory apparatus.

As you can see, we are really talking about the emergence of a countereconomy, a free-market universe that runs parallel to the dollar-based economy.

Skeptics say: “But I can’t use any of these monetary instruments to pay rent, buy a car, or get groceries.” Well, that’s because these ideas are all ventures that take time to develop. Money is like any other good: It begins with speculation and goes through a period of gradual adoption until it is universal.

Phones were not universally useful until many people had them. It was the same with email. When I first saw an email address, I thought: That’s the silliest thing ever, because who will even write this guy? Eventually, the network grew and reached the critical mass and the government’s system of mail delivery took a massive hit for the first time ever.

Why wait for monetary reform to come from the top? If the market wants a better-quality money, one that frees markets and makes economic exchange more beneficial, markets will create it out of existing resources and realities. This can even happen when government objects. Government can only defy human desires for so long before people decide that the costs of compliance outweigh the benefits.

The government’s money monopoly is crucial to its control over society. What happens when that comes to an end? Imagine the future.

Sincerely,

Jeffrey Tucker

P.S. If you’re interested in learning more about alternative currencies in history, be sure to check out Good Money by George Selgin. Selgin’s book is a lively tale about how monetary entrepreneurs took it upon themselves to solve the problems caused by the Royal Mint, which failed to meet the needs of a growing economy. Click here to learn more about the book and instantly access an exclusive 20% discount, normally reserved for new members of the Laissez Faire Club. This discount is just one of the benefits Club members enjoy. Members also have instant access to a growing library of e-books covering a wide variety of engaging topics, with a new book being added every other week. New members also receive Laissez Faire Books’ exclusive Economics in One Library, a complete (yet concise) collection of economic ideas that help define the economic reality we find ourselves in… and offer insights into how to protect what you have. To find out more about the Club and whether it’s right for you, click here. ]

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  • http://www.facebook.com/john.turmel John KingofthePaupers Turmel

    Jct: So he can only issue as many poker chips as he has gold, no matter how much collateral the customers who want to buy in have?

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  • http://www.facebook.com/alis.aljic St Alice

    only a currency physically containing in the bill itself an exact value/amount of precious minerals (gold, diamonds, whatever) could become a globally accepted and respected currency.

    using coins and paper money for petty cash transactions, for which we know that its purpose was and is to vouch i.e. merely represent monetary value – luckily became obsolete the very day a possibility of digital credit payment became a reality.

    Transferring the service of exchanging these large (mineral) bills for petty cash digital credit (and vice-versa) – to private businesses and having those very businesses vouching-themselves-for-value-of-their-digital-credit – will significantly prevent any local (country’s) currency from becoming a commodity of speculative trade ever again simply because the value of the mineral bill will be contained in the bill itself making its value virtually immune to economic fluctuations. the value of goods n services will then be primarily affected by the demand-supply ratio;
    but, even then, not even regional occurrence of shortages caused by, for example, local catastrophic events, or armed conflict, could noticeably devalue this mineral money since sharing it as one global currency – provides assurances that possessing it allows its owner to depend on the stability of its value,in spite of the local catastrophic event, This is something that a local (country’s) currency was never able to ensure during dire times, and therefore every country was relying on its foreign currency reserves – whose value was also dependent on absence of catastrophic events in the country of the foreign currency’s origin. sharing one world currency such as these mineral bills would ensure more stability and less dependence on currencies of predominantly more prosperous and advantageous countries.

    i presume street beggars would not appreciate this kind of monetary arrangement at first since patty cash would practically disappear in reality, but then again eventually there will be no need for anyone to beg once the fractal banking gets permanently removed from the equation with introduction of mineral bills.

  • dave ranks

    Shouldn’t you put your money where your mouth is and accept bitcoins in exchange for your books. I would have bought Good Money already if you did.

  • Keith Smith

    The article seems to leave out some of the other types of money on display at Liberty Forum. Maybe they aren’t top alternatives :)
    Suns of Liberty http://silverforliberty.com/
    Silver dime cards http://donttreadonmeme.com/

  • http://profiles.google.com/prakash.chandrashekar Prakash Chandrashekar

    Mr Tucker, now that you have a wallet, you can add a bitcoin address to your signature so that your fans who are also bitcoiners can tip you.

  • http://twitter.com/dsarango Diego Samper

    Thats all we need to break the governments monopoly on currencies. The turning point would be a bit painful as business start moving to this type of model. It may cost jobs but just for a while, the businesses need to readapt to this new market. Then the market will demand those jobs again. Thank you Mr. Tucker for pronouncing yourself on this other alternatives.

    • Speak2Truth

      I submit to you that if Government were to retake its lawful, Constitutionally mandated job of coining currency, it would fix the mess we’re in with fractional reserve lending. Sadly, the powers being the FRL system are willing to murder to keep it going. Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Jackson, John F. Kennedy, even Moammar Gadhafi who proclaimed he would get rid of the money-lenders and print a Libyan currency called the Gold Dinar.

      Abraham Lincoln did restore lawful production of currency to the US Congress, to eliminate the unlawful creation of debt and interest payments just for printing currency. Lincoln’s Greenback Dollar elicited a highly predictable response from the powers-that-be that do not want the masses to become free and prosperous:

      “If that mischievous financial policy, which had its origin in the North American Republic, should become indurated down to a fixture, then that Government will furnish its own money without cost. It will pay off debts and be without a debt. It will have all the money necessary to carry on its commerce. It will become prosperous beyond precedent in the history of the civilized governments of the world. The brains and the wealth of all countries will go to North America. That government must be destroyed, or it will destroy every monarchy on the globe.” – London Times

      And how best to destroy the prosperous system? Load it down with debt and interest that can never be repaid. They’re doing it. Right now, by “borrowing” our currency from the Federal Reserve, from China, from whomever is willing to charge interest for a service that is, legally, only within the power of the US Congress.

  • Kay F.

    Thank you for addressing this one small aspect of the state licensing problem. In Virginia, mental health counselors are protected like a medieval guild by the most restrictive licensing requirements in the nation. Experienced credentialed mental health counselors who move to Virginia from other states (outside the very few with which VA has an agreement) are informed that they have to complete a two-year, full-time supervised apprenticeship, just as though they were recent graduates with no experience. If the would-be counselor is hired by a for-profit agency for the supervisory period, he or she will be subjected to appalling work conditions that include no compensation for anything but the hours spent with clients (nothing for paperwork, driving time to see clients, or required agency meetings), resulting in an effective hourly rate in the range of $10. Agencies sometimes make mistakes in recording supervised hours, which means that the “apprentice” spends even more time trying to get the hours needed. Not to mention virtually no sick leave or vacation time. All this while agency owners are on record crowing over the profits they are making from Medicaid. What this needs is an old-fashioned expose, so the public can learn how their tax dollars are enabling virtual slave labor to support the lavish lifestyles of agency owners.

  • http://twitter.com/whitslack Matt Whitlock

    Thank you so much for this write-up, Mr. Tucker. And thanks for coming by and using our Bitcoin Machine. You truly understand how important Bitcoin is to our future, and you explain it in such an eloquent, almost poetic way. It was a pleasure seeing you at Liberty Forum. I hope to see you again next year!

  • http://www.facebook.com/steve.macias Steve Macias

    This is so encouraging. Competition, not government, will kill the dollar.

  • Bob_Robert

    And thank you, Mr. Tucker, for coming all the way to New Hampshire again.

    You are more than welcome any time.