How Capital Misallocation Warps Money with Steven Lubka - WBD574
The Peter McCormack Show
Peter McCormack
4.7 • 2.8K Ratings
🗓️ 31 October 2022
⏱️ 80 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Steven Lubka is Managing Director of Private Client Services at Swan Bitcoin. In this interview, we discuss how the misallocation of money by central banks distorts money, destroys capital, and creates zombie companies. Steven calls for money to be left to find its natural state within a free market.
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Society has become accustomed to the intervention of central banks in the economy. The underlying narrative is that central banks have the power to direct the economy through the manipulation of money. A principle level is through the control of interest rates: artificial adjustments to the cost of borrowing money aimed at promoting or tempering growth.
You don't have to be an economics expert though to know that central banks' interventions seem to have become excessive. We have had a decade of near-zero interest rates. In addition to this, central banks have heavily lent on money printing to maintain economic stability: one-fifth of all US dollars were printed in 2020 alone.
These significant adjustments to the money supply set in train damaging second-order impacts. Given rising debt levels and recessionary forces, governments are seeking ways to stimulate growth. However, the economy has not been allowed to function normally for an extended period. We may therefore be in a position where significant businesses aren't able to operate with a more natural cost of money.
Many businesses have developed in a period where the cost of money has been artificially low. This has created zombie companies, which need support to survive. This leads to a cascading series of issues: such companies divert resources from more efficient enterprises, but they are destined to fail, which destroys capital. It effectively hollows out parts of the economy.
The misallocation of capital is therefore counterproductive: short-term stability is a mirage that hides long-term systemic vulnerability. Steven Lubka's thesis is that Bitcoin is the answer. It is a real tangible asset with a fixed monetary policy that enables price to be reflective of reality. The result is a market that can make rational decisions, build robust companies, and allow order to emerge In short, Bitcoin fixes the money.
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Transcript
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| 0:16.0 | If everyone uses a 12 inch roller to build a house and then one day the government wakes up and they change out all the rollers for an 11 inch roller. But they don't tell anybody. That distorts everything in the system because you're using that as a measure. |
| 0:22.0 | And the same thing happens with money. |
| 0:24.0 | Hello there, how are you all? Happy Halloween, happy White Paper anniversary day. |
| 0:30.0 | Yes, it was this day that Satoshi released the white paper to the world. |
| 0:33.6 | It's also my birthday. |
| 0:35.1 | You think that's a coincidence. |
| 0:37.4 | Maybe it is. |
| 0:38.4 | Maybe it isn't. |
| 0:39.4 | Anyway, welcome to the What Bitcoin did podcast, which is brought to you by Gemini, the only place I'm using for buying |
| 0:44.5 | Bitcoin, and as it's my birthday, and as it's Whitetpaper Anniversary Day, I'm going to be stacking |
| 0:49.7 | some sats. |
| 0:50.9 | I'm your host, Peter McCormack, and today I've got an interview with Stephen Lubbka |
| 0:54.5 | Stephen is from Swan we've got him back on the show now after the last show we've made |
| 0:58.0 | with Stephen a couple of months back I knew I wanted to get him back on |
| 1:01.0 | so I've said whenever we're back in Miami Stephen we'll call you up we'll get him back on. So I've said whenever we're back in Miami, Stephen, we'll call you up, |
| 1:04.0 | we'll get you back on the show. And he just written an entire article for us, or not for us, but for us to use for the show, |
| 1:10.1 | about the misallocation, the capital. It's a great piece and it helps to make sense to some of the strange events we're seeing around us, |
| 1:16.5 | particularly in relation to the weird phenomenon of the explosion of firms that don't make any money, |
| 1:21.5 | which is kind of weird. |
| 1:23.0 | But I love talking to Stephen, he's super knowledgeable, passionate and excellent at breaking |
| 1:27.4 | down complex issues. |
| 1:29.4 | So if you've got any questions about this, you want to reach out, |
... |
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