> A model that I often use for cryptocurrency is that it is rediscovering traditional finance: In its early days, crypto was a brand-new financial system, unsullied by the old evils of central banking, leverage, regulation, etc.; eventually people realized that some of those things were good, and started reinventing them. One way to reinvent finance is for idealistic crypto technologists to invent banking, leverage, regulation, etc., from first principles, with cursory or no knowledge of how the traditional financial system addressed these issues or why it rejected other solutions. You would expect this to lead to flawed but interesting results, whole new ways of doing things that might blow up horribly but that might instead point the way to a better future.
I find the fact that crypto is re-inventing finance from first principles to be really interesting.
As he says, "You would expect this to lead to flawed but interesting results, whole new ways of doing things that might blow up horribly but that might instead point the way to a better future".
Matt Levine wrote about exactly this in a recent Money Stuff column: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2021-05-11/money-... . First paragraph:
> A model that I often use for cryptocurrency is that it is rediscovering traditional finance: In its early days, crypto was a brand-new financial system, unsullied by the old evils of central banking, leverage, regulation, etc.; eventually people realized that some of those things were good, and started reinventing them. One way to reinvent finance is for idealistic crypto technologists to invent banking, leverage, regulation, etc., from first principles, with cursory or no knowledge of how the traditional financial system addressed these issues or why it rejected other solutions. You would expect this to lead to flawed but interesting results, whole new ways of doing things that might blow up horribly but that might instead point the way to a better future.