Bitcoin Mission Statement - Final-V1.2 PDF
Bitcoin Mission Statement - Final-V1.2 PDF
Bitcoin Mission Statement - Final-V1.2 PDF
Or
What does it mean Sharing Economy and Distributed Trust?
Dmitri Kosten
Abstract. Technological advancements in the means of production are the driving force behind the
changes in the prevailing system of socio-economic relations. Feudalism was transformed into capitalism
as a result of such advancements. While man obtained physical freedom, the financial freedom remained
under the control of the centralized authority.
A deep level of collaboration is required to attain the next level of productivity provided by new
technological advancements. However, the present system with a centralized control of governance and
finance appears to constrain and restrain the value producing economy. This constriction becomes especially
evident when the business environment requires collaboration to create, as it underlines the inherent conflict
of centralized control. The most recent tech sector innovations, such as smart contracts and cryptocurrencies, are poised to disrupt the system of centralized control. The removal of a centralized authority
from the position of control will change the fabric of the society to reflect the mesh network of shared
resources. The society will transform to the new form of socio-economic relations.
Summary
The biggest achievement and value proposition of Blockchain and Bitcoin technology is their ability to give the
powers of governance and finance to the people via peer-to-peer technology. It shifts power from centralized
authorities to the power of the network the power of masses. When Feudalism transitioned to Capitalism, the
power of governance was given to the masses. Yet, the power of finance remained a centralized functioni.
For the first time, the Blockchain technological innovation has given society the option of decentralizing the
function of finance and control of the financial industry. This also creates a transparent mechanism for jointly
owning public assets and managing the regulations of public affairs without intermediaries. Many roles of the
government will change as the result of the decentralization of the function of finance. Some roles will be
automated, some simplified, and some retired. The prevailing socio-economic framework will no longer fit the
new ecosystem of relations and changes will be required. Is this the beginning of a transition from Capitalism to
another state?
Dmitri Kosten is the President and Co-Founder of 3D Business Solutions located in New York, USA. 3D Business Solutions focuses on
Blockchain technology as a paradigm shift that brings innovation to the Insurance and Financial Services industry. Our vision outlines
the Insurance Industry ecosystem using Blockchain technology, smart contracts, and peer-to-peer architecture. Our research validates
that Blockchain technology provides an opportunity to significantly improve business model.
The social impact of this change can be compared to the social effect of abolition of slavery, and the technological
impact can be compared to the influence of the invention the combustion engine had. The economic impact seems
likely to move society towards a new structure of socio-economic relationships, possibly what Marx described as
socialism or some form of it, crypto-socialism as an example.
Blockchain technology and its adaptation will go through several phases. First, it will disrupt the financial sector.
Then, it will propagate trough the value-creating sector. Finally, it will force change on socio-economic
institutions to become more reflective of a new form of social organization.
This technology is in its formative stage today. However, its influence is already being felt in the financial
industry and an increased reliance on it seems to be a natural course of our socio-economic evolution.
Introduction
Blockchain technologies, and bitcoin as its first practical application, continue to thrive and grow at an
unprecedented rate. Why are masses of people and organizations of all stripes continuing to join this un-endorsed
ecosystem? The answer is simple it makes better sense, socially and economically. For some it is an aha
moment and for some it is simply a matter of following their intuition.
It is not an easy task to understand the concept of the Blockchain at first, and then grasp its implications. Deep
subject matter expertise is required in multiple disciplines such as Computer Science, Information Technologies,
Economics, Finance, and possibly others. Yet, once the concepts are understood and the implications are grasped,
the effect can be compared to the discovery of the third dimension in a two dimensional world. What previously
was viewed as a sufficient form of operation, the new model reveals to be flat and lacking perspective.
The single most important flaw of the financial system today is its ability to print fiat. Archimedes once said
Give me the lever and place to stand, and I will move the world. The same can be paraphrased today about
fiat: Give me the printer and the country to print, and I will buy the world.
The economics textbooks state that the impact of printing has a velocity of propagation through the economic
pipeline. This puts at a predefined competitive disadvantage entities that are furthest away from the center of the
money supply. The centralized printing discriminates with a higher burden those who are further away from the
center of the money supply on the chain of economic activity. This begs the question: Is this a designed feature,
or is it an unintended economic consequence?
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When comparing the central bank driven system with a decentralized crypto-currency alternative, it becomes
apparent that centralized system sets the framework where the order of access to freshly printed cash in the chain
of economic activities make significant, if not primary, the difference in the formula of competitive advantage.
Businesses with a spot closest to the king get rewarded with greater economic rents. The last spot in the order
carries the full burden of devaluation.
This becomes an especially detrimental trend over a statistically significant period of time. The competition for
creating better economic value eventually gets replaced with the competition for the seat higher up on the
ladder. Direct evidence of this is the latest surge of crony-capitalism business models in all corners of the world.ii
The decentralized principle of bitcoin is poised to end this detrimental trend and restore equilibrium to market
relationships with its re-emphasis on value creation. When this shift to a decentralized crypto-currency network
gains critical mass, the hierarchical order of access to cash will be replaced with the principles of a mesh network
and thus, will reflect the principles of social and democratic co-existence to a far greater degree.iii
This change will trigger the transformation of the socio-economic structure of society in many ways some
aspects of this change are quite difficult to envision.
Transformation
The technological simplicity and permissionless principles of the decentralized model, together with
substantially lower costs of doing business will first cripple the artificial grip of the banking industry on many
high-margin financial services like money transmission, financial underwriting, etc. Those services are already
getting replaced with cost-effective decentralized solutions and making it economically feasible to deliver
financial services to all corners of the world, regardless of scale.
Further propagation of financial decentralization will make certain centrally scheduled functions obsolete, and
will make impossible the abuses inherent into todays centralized trust based financial system, such as: LIBOR
collusions, naked shorts, front running, and others. Because the design itself of a trustless and decentralized
system re-unites trade and settlement into one transactioniv, such systemic abuses will be automatically precluded.
This will stop the process of siphoning net worth from the system at the level of event orchestrationv, which is
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believed to be one of the major sources of economic inequalities. Over time, the market forces will re-distribute
economic values more evenly among all market participants. This change will facilitate a more sustainable market
growth for years to come.vi
This transformation over time will lead to more proportionate accumulation of wealth. The middle class will
regain and expand its social influence. As a reaction to economic transformation, the social structure of society
will begin to transform.
The same mechanism will halt the practice of excessive risk-taking by systemic institutions. The unlimited access
to fiat combined with the too-big-to-fail policy is the most blatant example of the moral-hazard dilemma in the
financial services industry today. The inability to get access to bail out funds will play the role of a natural
deterrent. For example, in the absence of a centralized money supply channel the fractional reserve banking
system will be significantly impaired, or may cease to exist. Because the mesh network has no single authority to
replenish bank reserves in the event of a bank run or excessive risk taking, the system of fractional reserve will
become impractical.
The removal of the centralized the money supply mechanism will end the taxation through inflation (A.
Greenspan, The Objectivist, 1968) policy that is used aggressively as mechanism of transferring value to the top
through devaluation of accumulation at the bottom. The decentralized money supply network (a.k.a. miners) will
disrupt existing money supply channels, the role currently played by the banking industry, by default is the main
economic beneficiary of the system by means fractional reserve and multiplier effect. No longer will seat higher
up on the ladder produce competitive advantage.
Today the centralized money supply system has all the mechanisms for the total control of resource reallocation,
irrespective of market conditions. The unconstrained access to fiat creates the environment where significant labor
and material resources can be re-allocated at ones will. Wars and research can be funded without regard for
supply and demand, taxing both sides of the equation. It also creates an environment for wasteful spending of
finite natural resources. The danger of accelerating our exhaustion of resources today, when our technology has
not yet been developed to fully utilize them, carries the price tag into the not so distant future. Dmitry Mendeleev,
the father of chemical elements periodic table, once said that Using oil for heating purposes, is as barbaric as
using paper government bonds for sustaining the fire to keep the house warm.
It is important to note, that it is not means of production alone, but production combined with the change in the
attitude towards working relationships that made the new form of socio-economic relations superior to the
existing feudal model. This new form of socio-economic relations made evident that man and property no longer
shared the same characteristics, thus requiring re-classification. It becam necessary for the institution of socioeconomic relations to re-adjust itself as a result.
The new institution of socio-economic relations declared the liberation of man. Man was no longer classified as
chattel or physical property. The principles of new socio-economic relations were re-established based on
individual freedom, choice, respect, personal will, and equality.
In the same spirit of individual freedom, choice, respect, personal will, and equality, young capitalism embraced
the elective form of governing public affairs. This new model placed elected officials in the position where they
must manage their individual economic interests within the scope of such abstract and non-tangible concepts as
public interests. The very choice of selecting the model of elective governance introduced the temptation and gave
the birth to the principle of The Elected Officials Dilemma.
The Elected Officials Dilemma is the concept specific to capitalism, where the conflict of public and private
ownership exists. Free man, as a newly-created class in the formula of socio-economic relations, represented a
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growing force that required a layer of physical and organizational structure that had no ownership. The concept of
the public sector was born as a result.
In the feudal times the lord was the owner of what is now a public sector. The absence of the owner and
replacement of this role with the elected individual who gets entrusted with the power of managing public assets
and the public infrastructure automatically introduces the element of temptation. The elected individual is placed
in a position where he is tempted to earn benefits for himself while operating assets that belong to no one
specifically and in the framework of such an abstract concept as public interests. The higher the level of
governance, and the larger the constituency, the more abstract the concept of public interests becomes. The
power of temptation grows higher with the proportion of assets under ones supervision.
What types of measures or mechanisms can society and its constituency introduce to counter such a dilemma?
One option is to create layers of laws and top them up with layers of enforcement mechanisms to preclude the
possibility of abuse. This option is exercised by society today.
Another option would be to remove the actual ground for temptation to a maximum degree from the system of
governance, by making it systemically impossible to gain personal benefit from governing public interests. Even
Plato, in The Republic, saw the need of safeguarding the public interest by limiting remuneration in the golden
ruling class, which had as its reward the privilege of ruling itself.
Our history, and evidences, point out, the first option is not producing the desired result, regardless of the level of
complexity of the laws and enforcing mechanisms. Moreover, data indicates that the system of governance
continues to expand, and even becoming a burden, in some cases. Prominent economists argue that the cost of
governance starts to outgrow the benefits it producesviii.
If the second option is to be embraced, it is self-evident that in the absence of the Elected Officials Dilemma
many of todays socio-economic problems would self-resolve themselves. However, society continues to pursue
the first option.
Classical Economic Principles and the function of Money in managing public interests.
As per the prevailing modern economic concepts in use, the quantity of Money (M) plays an important role in the
economy.
The prevailing framework states that shortage of M can slow down or contract economic growth, while excessive
amounts can accelerate and even overheat the economic activity. The excessive growth rate of M will lead to
inflation, and shortage of M will lead to deflation and the subsequent slow down or contraction of the economy.
The argument is made that because shortage of M leads to its appreciation in value, it triggers hording of M,
which decreases investments, raises the costs of production, decrease of future profits and leads to economic
contraction. Thus, the framework articulates that small inflation is good and hyperinflation is not good, yet much
better than deflation.
By this logic, the devaluation of assets through currency debasement appears to be the main driver pushing
economic progress. Studies have shown that such devaluation of assets only exacerbates economic hardship. In
addition, because of the velocity of propagation of inflation through the economy goes from the top to the bottom,
the quantitative easing acts as a mechanism that transfers economic worth from the bottom to the top.
Economic Principles through the prism of function of money and the impact on the
behavior of society.
Modern economic theory describes money as entity that carries three distinct properties:
Storage of Value
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Unit of Account
Medium of Exchange
Money also has an important characteristic called fungibility, which would not be classified as property, but
rather as a feature.
Now, let us assess the above economic concept through the prism of the function of money. What impact do the
above described economic principles have on the average market participant?
Inflation violates moneys property as a storage of value. At the time of economic growth, increased economic
activity triggers higher demand for M, and thus camouflages the full detriment of inflation on the moneys
property as storage of value. At the time of contraction, the impact of inflation becomes more apparent. The
interest rate policy, which is in its principle designed to offset loss of value and smooth out economic up-anddown swings, places real value producers at a disadvantage regardless of interest rate direction. Whether interest
rates will go up or down, the value producing sector will have losers and winners. However, on the aggregate
level there will be more real value taken out of economic producers and transferred to the financial sector due to
debasement, or increased financial costs, or both. Various mechanisms that control the propagation speed of
newly printed fiat through the economic pipeline make it more difficult to observe its impact over the period of
time.
Printing of fiat also disturbs the other two money properties, unit of account and medium of exchange. It is unclear
what purpose unit of account serves, if the unit itself has no static value. Imagine an environment where units of
measurement for distance, weight, and volume float at will. What type of distorted reality would such a
framework of floating units of measurement portray? What type of science and predictive behavior models could
one build on the framework of floating references? In the absence of a static storage of value and unit of
account, the medium of exchange also becomes a concept engendered from the realm of the absurd.
Fungibility is an important feature of money as it enables liquidity and exchange. However, because the printing
of fiat changes the underlying properties of money, its fungibility also gets violated. It is well-understood
knowledge that a dollar printed in 1970 does not carry the same value as a dollar printed in 2015. The theory of
time value of money account for the change of value over time with the framework of financial calculations, such
as FV, NPV, compound and risk free interest, etc. In other words, the dollar printed in 1970 requires a
recalculation of the value it stores in order to stay fungible with the dollar of 2015. Just as gasoline with different
octane numbers (93, 91, and 87) store different amounts of energy, the dollar printed in 1970 and the one printed
in 2015 have different purchasing powers. One will find it self-evident that gasolines with different octane
numbers are not fungible. Yet, the same principle on a more abstract on a non-physical level appears to comfort
the majority. Only when the dollar is observed through a timeline and then its value is adjusted through
mathematical equations, can one argue that the dollar regains fungibility. However, it is important to point that
not all economic transactions are uniformly treated with the same financial adjustment to arrive at the same
common denominator of stored value, therefore statistically significant fungibility cannot be claimed even after
the adjustments.
This significantly complicates the ability to account and carry forward stored value on an aggregate level.
Average market participants ability to make wise and prudent investment decisions get significantly
compromised and even disabled. Even the top intellectual layer struggles with the task of carrying the stored
economic value because of the daunting and often impossible task of predicting the outcomes of complexities,
controlled by ones will on various levels.
banking system creates 10 units of financial claims without impact to the price equilibrium. Once inside of the
financial system, the producer of economic output ends up with 1/10th of the financial claim on the value of his
output, where 9/10 of it is retained by the banking sector through the system of fractional reserves. In economic
relations of feudal times, the church was entitled to claim 1/10 of economic output and that was viewed as
excessive economic burden. The modern system of fractional reserve brings word excessive to the new level.
How is it possible that such leverage of financial claims against real economic outputs does not have dramatic
impact on the supply/demand price equilibrium? The most plausible explanation is that the framework of financial
regulations and the relations prevents the leaking of excessive financial claims directly into demand function.
Instead, the empirical evidences suggest that excessive financial claims are channeled into economic pits at the
level far above of the markets level of marginal propensity to consume (MPS).
Because of the magnitude of the multiplier effect and the centralized systems ability to impose strict controls on
how the funds can get channeled or allocated back to the value producing sector, it breaks down the very
fundamental assumption of monotonicity of economic functions. That, in turn, puts in question the underlying
principles of the free market economy.
Important to note: this picture illustrates as if the banker facilitates the trade, in addition to being the provider of medium of
exchange. In real life, bankers only provides the medium of exchange and separates himself from the actual trade. This
important distinction is not represented in this diagram, but will be discussed later.
First lets look at the power of centralized financial intermediation. What this picture illustrates, because of
centralized control of medium of exchange and financial intermediation, in phase one the financial intermediary
has a claim on entire economic output, in phase two and three financial system has full control of the trade, and
what size of fee it can elect to asses for its intermediary services.
Phase one illustrates that because of the centralized ownership of the claim on the entire economic output,
the financial intermediary has the right of first hand to consume as much of economic output as he wishes
and transact only remained undesired output, thus having direct impact on exchange.
Phase two illustrates that the intermediary has full control of the manner of exchange and can influence
the price (within the range of profitability margins, of course).
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The full trade cycle illustrates that when a centralized financial intermediary exists, the free market forces
become the force of benevolent dictator, and not the force of invisible hand.
Now lets look at the role of economic pits. The economic pits are a dynamic mechanisms or static assets that
can trap the impact of newly-printed financial claims for extended period of time, or forever. Economic pits are
the tools by which real value is extracted from the value producing sector in exchange for the right to transact via
the intermediary.
In the above example, in order to saturate the exchange with financial claims, first both farmers have to trade
portion of their output with bank, and only then, they can trade with each other. If farmers double their output, the
bank will double the number of financial claims to keep price parity constant. (The additional output must be
saturated with financial claims.) Both farmers, again, first would have to trade with the bank, exchanging the
output for financial claims up to the saturation point, and only then trade with each other. As a result, the financial
intermediary can appropriate 50% share of economic growth in exchange for the right to conduct the trade using
his medium of exchange. Thus, the monetization of economic growth (a.k.a. seigniorage) acts as an economic
pit, or dynamic mechanism, that traps newly-printed financial claims and allows the banker to retain units of the
real economic output.
It is important to note that the Elected Officials Dilemma appears to find a point of reconciliation through the
creation, maintenance, and expansion of economic pits offered by centralized market intermediary. As long as
economic pits continue to trap financial claims and extract economic rents, the Elected Officials Dilemma is
resolved without immediately visible impact on the price parity or economic stability. Yet, the hidden costs of
Elected Officials Dilemma run high, and in fact, very high.
The combination of the Elected Officials Dilemma and the centralized financial intermediary can produce
various forms of economic pits. It is important to note that well performing economic pits are required to trap
financial claims for an extended time, long enough so that its eventual impact can be blamed on the change of
external factors (political, technological, demographic, environmental, etc.).
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Stock Market
The most intuitive example is a stock market as well as other markets of financial instruments. Initial
monetization of underlying assets allows consumption of printed cash without having the impact on pricing parity
of economic goods. Growth of stock market valuation is the reflection of assigning more and more of financial
claims against real assets. The legislative framework for tax deferred retirement savings serves the dual role of
time trap of savings with tax free benefits. The size of this deferred saving pool is the multiple of GDP.
While one can argue that the stock market serves true economic benefits, the economic benefits of the volume of
derivatives market has a more questionable value. The financial mechanisms that were initially designed to serve
as an insurance instrument for future predictability of prices became converted into a betting parlor for speculators
with zero sum game. The argument that the economic value of derivatives market as price maker is shaky for the
very least, as the value of bets often surpasses 100 times the value of underlying asset, which makes it beyond
inefficient. One could draw an economic analogy with the project in which the cost of planning and budgeting is
100 times more than the actual value of the project.
Decentralization of financial control removes the power of benevolent dictator from the trade, and brings back the
market force of the invisible hand. The network of miners more appropriately align itself with the value creating
market, which also operates as decentralized network of buyers and sellers. The network effect makes it
impossible for financial intermediaries to impact the market trade in the manner of centralized financial
intermediary.
The insurance offered by centralized financial intermediary through mechanism of taxation through inflation is
costly. It comes in broad strokes, unevenly distributes the burden, and pushes most of it to the bottom of
economic layer, as discussed earlier in the paper.
ownership. The agents reach will fall within the owners needs and agents jurisdiction. Such configuration will
resolve the Elected Officials Dilemma.
The risk of failure and therefore the cost of insurance against failure of management layer will be dramatically
reduced. The same type of insurance can be socially engineered and programmatically enforced by carrying equal
impact on all affected members of socio-economic ecosystem. The side chains combined with smart contract can
carry exact precision of the impact and guarantee the enforcement of the obligation.
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Conclusion
It appears that we are standing at an historical moment, when new technological advancements are poised to
disrupt the existing system of socio-economic relations.
Similar to the end of feudal times, todays technological advancements brought to light that decentralization of
governance and finance offers more socially just and, at the same time, a more economically efficient form of coexistence. Profitability driven, centralized forms of governance inundated with rent seeking schemes of all kinds
will become the system of the past. The framework of Decentralized Autonomous Enterprises (DAE) empowered
by smart contracts and the crypto-currencies, offers our future to replace todays unhealthy competition for
survival of capital with the collaboration for value creation. The collaboration for value creation offers to build a
more stable, more socially just, and less judicially-driven economic environment, where the act of passion will
have a more direct path to the act of the innovation.
Yet, just like in feudal times, for the society to attain full potential of technological advancements and to reach
qualitatively different level of productivity from collaborative environment, the labor is required to reach new
higher levels on the Maslows pyramid of the hierarchical needs. High moral standards, lack of prejudice,
creativity, focus on problem solving, and acceptance of facts must become integral parts of collaborative
relationships and the employee-employer obligationsix. Over time this will transform the fabric of the society.
Human kind will ascend to new heights and the historical period where the laws of accumulating the capital were
the main drivers of formation of the system of values will become the pages in the history books.
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References
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[6] Nakamoto, Satoshi. "Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System." Legitimate Applications of Peer-toPeer Networks: 1-9. Web. 29 Oct. 2015. <https://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdf>.
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[8] Pureswaran Veena, Sanjay Panikkar, Sumabala Nair, and Paul Brody. "Empowering the Edge - Practical
Insights on a Decentralized Internet of Things." Empowering the Edge - Practical Insights on a Decentralized
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[9] James Manyika, Michael Chui, Peter Bisson, Jonathan Woetzel, Richard Dobbs, Jaques Bughin, and Dan
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[11] Luigi Zingales. When business and government are bedfellows. The Economist, August 23, 2012. Web.
29. Oct. 2015. < http://www.economist.com/blogs/prospero/2012/08/quick-study-luigi-zingales-crony-capitalism>
Annotations
Let me issue and control a nations money and I care not who writes the laws. Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744-1812),
founder of the House of Rothschild.
i
ii
"The New Age of Crony Capitalism." The Economist. The Economist Newspaper, 15 Mar. 2014. Web. 29 Oct. 2015.
<http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21598996-political-connections-have-made-many-people-hugely-rich-recentyears-crony-capitalism-may>. Luigi Zingales. When business and government are bedfellows. The Economist, August
23, 2012. Web. 29. Oct. 2015. < http://www.economist.com/blogs/prospero/2012/08/quick-study-luigi-zingales-cronycapitalism>
It is also consistent with Laisez-Faire an economic system in which transactions between private parties are free from
government interference such as regulations, privileges, tariffs, and subsidies. Wikipedia:
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laissez-faire>
iii
iv
vi
Thomas Piketty in his book Capitalism in 21st Century, illustrates that over-concentration of capital negatively influences
economic growth.
vii
Milton Friedman speech at CATO Institute: Theres no such thing as a free lunch (CATO).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AcOviVhRb9g
viii
..The pressure for speed and performance in todays tough markets is relentless, a point readily appreciated by business
executives and CIOs. To deliver incremental improvements of standard practices in these markets would not suffice. What
is needed is radical new thinking about traditional delivery models that moves from the hierarchical, closed, and resourcefocused model to an open environment that embraces community, social recognition, transparency and outcomes. IBM
Institute for Business Value: Small World: The Social Approach to Software Delivery http://www01.ibm.com/common/ssi/cgi-bin/ssialias?infotype=PM&subtype=XB&htmlfid=GBE03499USEN
ix
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