Another Engineered Global Economic Crisis Looming? Not if Our Data Economy Can Help it

Decentr
10 min readSep 10, 2019

The development of our decentralised platform, called Decentr, is currently progressing in lockstep with the development of our decentralised browser and platform.

Looming economic crisis: the current economic system is not a sustainable model

This continues to excite significant interest in the decentralised future we propose while further raising our public profile.

As a result, we are increasingly asked to give our opinions on everything from mainstream economic policy to heterodox economics and beyond. The variety of opinions sought by the media, SME’s, investors, researchers, think tanks and others is understandable: the sum of moving parts required to usher in a true Internet of Value (IoV) as part of the Web 3.0 solution that our tech is set to help create requires a broadly interdisciplinary approach.

However, such a multi-faceted conceptual and developmental approach can lead to misunderstandings as regards our broader aims and goals — especially when seen from a certain perspective, and without taking all the separate parts into account.

A recent conversation over at our Telegram underscores such misunderstandings as regards what we are trying to achieve.

The concerns voiced in this conversation lay squarely with the radically-new global economic mechanisms and models — which we call “deconomics” (“decentralised economics”) — that we are developing as part of our platform.

By way of clarification on this point, it is worth elaborating further on this conversation: the thrust of the concerns raised on Telegram were that the suggestion that any system (the assumption was that this was the system we were describing) that sought to “replace” the real-world mainstream economy with an alternative economy was, in one subscriber’s words, “unrealistic”.

Unrealistic” is a generous understatement. “Deluded” and “disingenuous” would be closer to the reality of such a proposition — “unnecessary” and “counterproductive” would be useful additions to the misgivings raised in this conversation.

This notion of somehow “replacing” the real-world global economy is not by any means what we are proposing; it is, in fact, the opposite of what we’re proposing.

Certainly, we are proposing to eliminate in favour of data-only the necessity for any means of external currency — fiat or digital — to facilitate online payments and trades. By necessary default, this will create a radically-new, online global economy — but — and this is what needs to be properly understood — we propose that this economy will act as a virtual parallel economy that is mutually supportive of and supported by the real-world economy: in our view, global society needs both these economies to underpin stability and security.

A Tale of Two Systems

Why both systems? The current global financial system is set up to value the acquisition of the medium of exchange (i.e., “fiat-money”) as the only socioeconomically desirable human pursuit (in order that banking cartels can manipulate its supply to create debt they then make real money from by charging interest). Let’s face it, no sane person with even a passing interest in economics, politics, history or even current affairs would consider this to be a singularly sustainable model in an increasingly fractured, digitised world — especially as debt is currently spiralling upwards at a pace far outstripping GWP.

It is insane by any definition: however, it is a model that becomes ever less viable the more we become a digitised society: conversely, the lack of more widespread digitisation — especially in EU and global industry — can be seen as the net result of inoperable real-world economic principles and practices applied to online economies and marketplaces.

The new economic paradigm that our platform and web browser, called Decentr, proposes — a paradigm that is broadly based on the concept of data-as-a-medium-of-exchange and not money-as-a-medium-of-exchange— and real-world economics are not mutually exclusive concepts. In fact, Decentr needs to maintain a sort of osmotic symbiosis with the real-world economy in order to maintain the stable value of payments and trades on our platform, and (we would argue) the same is true for the real-world economy where it concerns our tech. (Well something has to inject some checks and balances into the wildly predictable, pendulum-like swings between boom and bust.)

Our economy and the real-world economy reward different human activities differently — that does not need to change. The real-world economy can continue to reward a post-industrial trade-off characterised by time and labour exchanged for an agreed number of state-backed units of exchange (in the form of fiat-money). Our system will continue to underpin the realisation of individual self-worth (as expressed in data points on our users’ immutable Decentr ID, or “DecID”) as an alternative tradable and exchangeable value — one that is independent of the limitations inherent to any system based on the imposition of an external value store as a reward in and of itself (i.e., the real-world/post-industrial economy).

Each system is complementary in terms of supporting a different aspect of human endeavour. The aspect Decentr supports is becoming increasingly vital as many of the post-industrialist aspects of human endeavour that the real-world economy supports are increasingly being replaced by cyber-physical systems — from automated cars to the assembly lines that manufacture them — and software agents, such as AI-driven digital assistants.

In other words, robots (and their virtual equivalents) are taking over from human jobs.

Acceptance of this realisation raises a further question: what are those who find themselves perpetually jobless due to automation and digitisation supposed to do in the absence of our parallel economy? Retrain for yet another job that machines cannot currently do only to have an assembly line bot poach the position next year… with the same happening again next year and the year after that as machines become more dexterous, skilled and intelligent… ad infinitum until… well, until what? Until we have ghettoised the planet into those who can do jobs robots can’t (for now) and those who cannot? What would that world look like? (South Africa’s Gini coefficient would resemble a viable model for an egalitarian nirvana by comparison.)

Decentr accepts this reality and exploits it for social good: our parallel economy taps a vast and near-limitless source of human productivity and potential — the realisation of individual-achievement-and-self-fulfilment-as-a-value-store to replace money-as-a-value-store online. It is not only impossible for a machine to ever replicate this activity but our AI, called “DecAI”, needs the output created by our radically-new paradigm in order to train on in order to work more efficiently and coherently with humans. In this regard, our parallel economy is win-win for humans and AI.

Cycling from boom to bust: the coming economic crisis will be worse than 2008

Averting an Engineered Economic Crisis

How does our paradigm impact the broader real-world economy? With digitisation and automation eating the world, the parallel economy Decentr proposes is critical for global stability (real stability; not of the kind that governments promise us in exchange for rescinding more and more of our rights under the guise of “improved security”).

The world is already headed with the force and abandon of a careening locomotive into yet another “bust” in the global economic boom and bust cycle, with many commentators suggesting it will be far worse than 2008. We see no reason to dispute this — in a world comprised of global populations finally waking up to the incessant backroom tinkering of the global economy as part of a wider misuse and abuse of political privilege, it is within the interests of the powers that be to make damn certain control is maintained at the top.

To achieve this will require the powers that be ensure their misdirection away from their means to achieve these ends is suitably artful (or bloody) enough so that we, the public, do not immediately spot it — at least not in time anyway.

An engineered economic crisis is always good for that. (Blame it on bankers, falling GWP or pandemics. It’s all the same thing in the end.)

But they will need to lift their game to make good on such deceptions. We are as a global society all starting to see through the artifice. Current economic “recovery” is an illusion fuelled by trillions in manufactured debt (another bank-controlled pump and dump scheme); anyone who is “optimistic” about the global economic climate is not being rational — and the powers that be know we know it; why else manoeuvre the deluded and hysterical (you know who you are) into the top positions of global economic, industrial and political power? This game is as old as the Caesars: it normalises by association the insanity that empire-wide socioeconomic “correction” through deflation needs to reek in order to maintain power.

Too fire and brimstone for you? Take a good look around you: the storm clouds of an oncoming EU and global crisis are clear and gathering, including global default in skyrocketing consumer credit debt; smart money leaving stocks; mortgage interest rates at all time highs; record retail store closings; the two largest economies on Earth, the USA and China involved in an escalating trade war; the 8th largest economy in the world (and 3rd in the EU), Italy, is literally a basket case with Italian 2-year bond yields at their highest since 2008 (at around the level that triggered Greek bailouts); combined with the IMF refusing Italy a similar bailout (no surprise; Greece is an economy half the size of Italy and the EU struggled to contain that socioeconomic time bomb); all while Duetsche Bank continues to shed tens of thousands of jobs to offset years of losses (with it being incredible the bank has not already gone bust, but if and when it does, it will be a 2008 RBS/Lehman Brothers-scale crash) — the list goes on.

Stop-Gapping the Boom-and-Bust Cycle

Decentr is designed to be deployed as a stop-gap measure on a global scale to prevent another conveniently manufactured economic crisis; a pressure valve on the world economy that is set to incrementally trigger when boom cycles to bust. This allows for the type of public indignation and outrage created by state manipulation and economic manoeuvring to be released like escaping pressurised steam as socially beneficial activity that actually generates liquid funds. This will have the correlated affect of moderating the excesses of the fractional reserve banking system that would seek to suppress and silence by inducing these cycles in the first place.

The bottom line is our alternative system supports the needs of real-world banking and liquidity (both individual and institutional liquidity): this could have averted the fundamental circumstances that led to the 2008 crash (circumstances that are in many ways similar to that we are seeing now, only worse). Decentr could have done this by:

  1. Providing the public with a facility to sustainably repay individual debt (mortgages in 2008/general consumer debt in 2019), while;
  2. Ensuring any bank or government institution with positive community engagement across our networks (especially those having supported our system from the outset as significant stakeholders) that required bailouts would have been able to match their own immediate liquidity needs by deploying our system.

Decentr could have averted the banks’ 2008 pump and dump in the first place, saving millions of people from financial ruin as the banks sought to relieve their customers of what really matters to the banking cartels: property. (Even the banks know their “money” is inherently worthless.)

Without these dual parallel economy strands, we see no stable and sustainable future for the broader global economy — not as digitisation erodes increasingly more of the type of jobs and other commercial activity that the real-world economy was set up to reward, destabilising the whole creaky engine of oppression.

The reality is that nobody at any governmental or regulatory level has any clue either; there are simply no workable financial proposals in place to guarantee global economic stability. By blithely settling for the current real-world economic model that continues to use fiat as a “carrot” to exploit labour potential as the “stick” in order to generate debt is not really sustainable on any level (certainly not online).

However, it can be made so (and hence more accountable) where balanced against the release of the enormous untapped human potential currently locked up in a rapidly increasing global population. This needs to be achieved in a manner that is mutually supportive of the supply and demand needs of healthy global marketplaces, which is what our system is designed to do.

Feel free to get in touch for more details about Decentr, or with any questions or suggestions you might have via the contact form on our website.

Don’t forget to give us your 👏 !

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