Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
acceptedVersion
Publication Date
5-2023
Abstract
One of the perennial fault-lines in monetary theory is that between commodity and credit theories of money. The emergence of alternative payment systems based on blockchain and distributed ledger technologies, of which Bitcoin is the most prominent example, has raised a host of important questions in relation to this debate. This article considers two. The first is ontological: Are Bitcoin and similar ‘cryptocurrencies’ best conceived of as money? The second is political: Do these money candidates represent an emancipatory development over state-backed fiat currency? The ontological question, we will argue, invites the political one. If it is the case, as Chartalists maintain, that (i) for some X to be money it must have certain properties which can only be imparted by political authority (broadly understood) and if (ii) political authority ought to be subject to public control, then attempts by private actors to usurp a social ‘money function’ cannot count as legitimate political developments. We will argue in support of this position. This discussion is limited to Bitcoin, though its implications generalize for relevantly similar cryptocurrencies. Our method involves considering, first, claims made by Bitcoin’s defenders about its status as money, and what accounts for that status. While these claims are often thought to extend Mengerite or generally Austrian lines of economic argument, they resonate more with Marx’s theory of monetary value. Moreover, a close assessment of that theory’s defects yields specific normative conclusions that potentially undermine the notion that Bitcoin constitutes a valid means of resisting state monetary authority.
Discipline
Banking and Finance Law | Law and Economics
Research Areas
Corporate, Finance and Securities Law
Publication
Cambridge Journal of Economics
Volume
47
Issue
3
First Page
535
Last Page
554
ISSN
0309-166X
Identifier
10.1093/cje/bead008
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Citation
TULLY, Rector and ALLEN, J.G..
Menger or Marx? The political ontology of cryptocurrency. (2023). Cambridge Journal of Economics. 47, (3), 535-554.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/4723
Copyright Owner and License
Authors
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://doi.org/10.1093/cje/bead008