The Perils of Trump’s Proposed Bitcoin Strategic Reserve
Fourteen years ago, bitcoin was an experimental obscurity mainly popular among cypherpunks and libertarians, trading for less than a U.S. dollar. Since then, it has proven its success as a mostly swift and affordable way to move value globally, while experiencing unprecedented leaps in exchange value for dollars—as well as massive volatility. (Bitcoin first broke $100 in April 2013 and as of this writing is above $54,000.) Former President Donald Trump recently suggested that it’s time for the United States to form a bitcoin strategic reserve.
“The government has violated the cardinal rule that every bitcoiner knows by heart: Never sell your bitcoin,” said Trump, speaking to the Bitcoin Conference in Nashville in July. He vowed if he’s president again that the U.S. will “keep 100 percent of the bitcoin [it] currently holds or acquires into the future” instead of, as it now does, occasionally auctioning it off through the U.S. Marshals service that confiscated much of it from accused criminals who, in some cases, stole the bitcoin. The government already possesses around 200,000 bitcoin.
This boosterism was a change of heart: In 2021 Trump called bitcoin a “scam” and a danger to the dollar’s international dominance, but he seems to have realized his political coalition includes cryptocurrency enthusiasts.
Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R–Wyo.) has introduced a bill to make that strategic reserve real, working toward government ownership and stewardship of a million bitcoin—nearly 5 percent of the total amount that will ever exist, via purchases of 200,000 bitcoins a year for five years. The cost of that yearly purchase as this is being written would be $11.2 billion.
To finance
Article from Reason.com
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