Close Menu
  • Coins
    • Bitcoin
    • Ethereum
    • Altcoins
    • NFT
  • Blockchain
  • DeFi
  • Metaverse
  • Regulation
  • Other
    • Exchanges
    • ICO
    • GameFi
    • Mining
    • Legal
  • MarketCap
What's Hot

Philippines’ Digital Bank Maya Looks to US Market for Up to $1B IPO

20/03/2026

Amundi tokenized fund SAFO signals adoption of on-chain asset management

20/03/2026

Evegny Gokhberg: Market neutral DeFi strategies are essential for volatility, why diversification isn’t enough to manage risks, and the future of capital in DeFi

20/03/2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Back to NBTC homepage
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
X (Twitter) Telegram Facebook LinkedIn RSS
NBTC News
  • Coins
    1. Bitcoin
    2. Ethereum
    3. Altcoins
    4. NFT
    5. View All

    Price Breaks All-Time High Record Again – Here’s What We Know

    04/08/2025

    Bitcoin Switzerland? El Salvador to Host First Fully Native Bitcoin Capital Markets

    04/08/2025

    Bitcoin Breaks $119K, but XLM and HBAR Aren’t Impressed by Its Meager Percentage Gain

    04/08/2025

    High-Stakes Consolidation Could Define Q3 Trend

    04/08/2025

    Ethereum price outlook as network activity reaches record levels

    20/03/2026

    Ethereum Whale Buys $100 Million ETH as On-Chain Activity Hits Record Highs

    20/03/2026

    Ethereum Is Still Winning the Tokenization Race

    20/03/2026

    Ethereum Participation Tops 2021 Bull Market, Yet Price Tells a Different Story

    20/03/2026

    The Sui Ecosystem’s Top 3 Altcoin Performers

    29/07/2025

    Floki Launches $69000 Guerrilla Marketing Challenge With FlokiUltras3

    28/07/2025

    Crypto Beast denies role in Altcoin (ALT) crash rug pull, blames snipers

    28/07/2025

    $1.6 Billion XRP Surge: Here’s What’s Unfolding

    28/07/2025

    OpenSea token delay highlights tough conditions for 2026 NFT airdrop cycle

    18/03/2026

    The Solana NFT Marketplace at a Crossroads

    15/03/2026

    Top NFT Sales of the Week, Flying Tulip Sale Tops

    15/03/2026

    Pudgy Penguins ($PENGU) Dominates the Top NFT Projects by Social Activity

    13/03/2026

    Philippines’ Digital Bank Maya Looks to US Market for Up to $1B IPO

    20/03/2026

    Amundi tokenized fund SAFO signals adoption of on-chain asset management

    20/03/2026

    Evegny Gokhberg: Market neutral DeFi strategies are essential for volatility, why diversification isn’t enough to manage risks, and the future of capital in DeFi

    20/03/2026

    Ethereum price outlook as network activity reaches record levels

    20/03/2026
  • Blockchain

    Amundi tokenized fund SAFO signals adoption of on-chain asset management

    20/03/2026

    Apex and Polygon launch compliance chain for tokenized RWAs

    20/03/2026

    Bitcoin finance protocol Hashi launches on Sui with BitGo, FalconX backing

    20/03/2026

    AlloX Integrates SWFT Blockchain to Enhance AI Driven Capital Allocation

    20/03/2026

    YOM Set to Launch on TrustSwap, Expanding Push Into Decentralized Cloud Gaming

    20/03/2026
  • DeFi

    Evegny Gokhberg: Market neutral DeFi strategies are essential for volatility, why diversification isn’t enough to manage risks, and the future of capital in DeFi

    20/03/2026

    NetX Joins GANA to Advance Web3 Payments with PayFi Innovation

    20/03/2026

    River Partners With Stargate Finance To  Expand satUSD Stablecoin DeFi Cross-Chain Capabilities, Supported by LayerZero Interoperability 

    20/03/2026

    SafePal Integrates Uniswap to Enhance with in-Wallet Swaps

    20/03/2026

    Coinshares Debuts Regulated DeFi and RWA Yield Strategy With Railnet

    20/03/2026
  • Metaverse

    Land values capitulate as $24M metaverse plot collapses to just $9,000

    20/03/2026

    Meta to shutter Horizon Worlds metaverse on VR in favor of mobile

    18/03/2026

    Meta expands AI agent push with Moltbook acquisition

    10/03/2026

    ‘The Sandbox’ Adds Web-Based Games in Season 7 Accessibility Push

    24/02/2026

    AMD jumps as Meta signs multiyear AI infrastructure partnership

    24/02/2026
  • Regulation

    Philippines’ Digital Bank Maya Looks to US Market for Up to $1B IPO

    20/03/2026

    Kraken sponsors Trump Accounts in Wyoming, citing crypto alignment

    20/03/2026

    Crypto CEO Explains How the Wealthy Use Assets Like XRP to Build Long-Term Wealth Without Selling

    20/03/2026

    Stablecoins gain ground for paychecks and daily spending: BVNK report

    20/03/2026

    Why Is BTIG So Confident About Strategy As It Sets A $250 Price Target?

    20/03/2026
  • Other
    1. Exchanges
    2. ICO
    3. GameFi
    4. Mining
    5. Legal
    6. View All

    Ripple targets April for Australian financial license via acquisition

    20/03/2026

    Circle Launches Nanopayments on Testnet

    19/03/2026

    Strategic Expansion Brings Internet Computer to South Korea’s Premier Exchange

    19/03/2026

    DOJ investigates Binance transactions suspected of funding Iran proxies

    19/03/2026

    South Korea Poised to Lift Ban on Domestic ICOs After 7 Years

    19/12/2025

    Why 2025’s Token Boom Looks Both Familiar and Dangerous

    31/10/2025

    ICO for bitcoin yield farming chain Corn screams we’re so back

    22/01/2025

    Why 2025 Will See the Comeback of the ICO

    26/12/2024

    Dan Houser: “Goodfellas” revolutionized cinema and storytelling

    19/03/2026

    Pudgy Penguins Launched A New Game. Crypto Scammers Made A Fake Version

    18/03/2026

    PlaysOut and Ads3 Ally to Enhance User Acquisition in Web3 Games

    18/03/2026

    6 Best Crypto Games For Android in 2026

    12/03/2026

    Fred Thiel: AI’s energy hunger reshapes bitcoin mining dynamics

    20/03/2026

    AI Data Centers Outpay Bitcoin Mining, Triggering Major Industry Shift

    20/03/2026

    Russia’s push for AI expansion threatens to undermine crypto mining

    19/03/2026

    Bitcoin Miners Catch a Break While Revenues Stay Ugly

    19/03/2026

    Edward Woodford: The crypto industry is overly focused on interest rates, accountability in AI is crucial for trust, and regulatory clarity is essential for market stability

    20/03/2026

    Peter Van Valkenburgh: Crypto’s regulatory landscape mirrors unregulated sports betting, the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act clarifies crypto jurisdiction, and why decentralized systems are essential for AI development

    19/03/2026

    Chris Giancarlo: Legislative clarity is vital for crypto’s future

    19/03/2026

    Chris Giancarlo: Political processes are reshaping crypto regulation, traditional finance needs clarity urgently, and prediction markets will transform decision-making

    19/03/2026

    Philippines’ Digital Bank Maya Looks to US Market for Up to $1B IPO

    20/03/2026

    Amundi tokenized fund SAFO signals adoption of on-chain asset management

    20/03/2026

    Evegny Gokhberg: Market neutral DeFi strategies are essential for volatility, why diversification isn’t enough to manage risks, and the future of capital in DeFi

    20/03/2026

    Ethereum price outlook as network activity reaches record levels

    20/03/2026
  • MarketCap
NBTC News
Home»Bitcoin»Bitcoin Has No Top Because Fiat Has No Bottom: Understanding Monetary Debasement
Bitcoin

Bitcoin Has No Top Because Fiat Has No Bottom: Understanding Monetary Debasement

NBTCBy NBTC19/04/2024No Comments11 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


MONETARY DEBASEMENT

Debasement refers to the action or process of reducing the quality or value of something. When talking about fiat currencies, debasement traditionally refers to the practice of reducing the precious metal content in coins while keeping their nominal value the same, thereby diluting the coin’s intrinsic worth. In a modern context, debasement has evolved to mean the reduction in the value or purchasing power of a currency — such as when central banks increase the supply of money, in the process lowering the nominal value of each unit.

UNDERSTANDING DEBASEMENT

Before paper money and coins made of cheap metals like nickel, currency consisted of coins made of precious metals like gold and silver. These were the most sought after metals of the time, giving them value beyond government decree. Debasement was a common practice to save on precious metals and use them in a mix of lower-value metals instead.

This practice of mixing the precious metals with a lower-quality metal means authorities could create additional coins with the same face value, expanding the money supply for a fraction of the cost compared to coins with more gold and silver content.

Today, coins and notes don’t have inherent worth, they are simply tokens that represent value. This means debasement relies on supply: i.e. how many coins or notes the issuing body allows to circulate. Debasement went through different processes and methods over time; therefore, we can define old and new methods.

TRADITIONAL METHOD

Coin clipping, sweating, and plugging were the most common debasement processes used until the introduction of paper money. Such methods were employed both by malicious actors that counterfeited coins and by authorities that increased the number of coins in circulation.

Clipping involves “shaving” the coins’ edges to remove some of the metal. As with sweating, the resulting clipped bits would be collected and used to make new counterfeit coins.

Sweating involves shaking coins vigorously in a bag until the edges of the coins come off and lay at the bottom. The pieces are then collected and used to create new coins.

Plugging was a way of punching a hole out of the coin’s middle area with the rest of the coin hammered together to close the gap. It could also be sawn in half with a plug of metal extracted from the interior. After filling the hole with a cheaper metal, the two halves would be fused again.

MODERN-DAY METHODS

Money supply increase is the modern method used by governments to debase the currency. By printing more money, governments get more funds to spend but it results in inflation for its citizens. Currency can be debased by increasing the money supply, lowering interest rates, or implementing other measures that encourage inflation; they’re all “good” ways of reducing the value of a currency.

WHY IS MONEY DEBASED?

Governments debase their currency so that they can spend without raising further taxes. Debasing money to fund wars was an effective way of increasing the money supply to engage in expensive conflicts without affecting people’s finances — or so it is believed.

Whether by traditional debasement or modern money printing, money supply increases have short-sighted benefits in boosting the economy. But in the long term, it leads to inflation and financial crises. The effects of this are felt most acutely by those in society who do not own hard assets that might counter the loss in the currency’s value.

Currency debasement could also occur by malicious actors who introduce counterfeit coins to an economy, but the consequence of being caught can in some countries lead to a death sentence.

“Inflation is legal counterfeiting, Counterfeiting is illegal inflation.” – Robert Breedlove

Governments can take some measures to mitigate risks associated with money debasement and prevent unstable and weak economies, for example by controlling the money supply and interest rates within a specific range, managing spending, and avoiding excessive borrowing.

Any economic reform that promotes productivity and attracts foreign investments helps maintain confidence in the currency and prevent money debasement.

REAL-WORLD EXAMPLES

The Roman Empire

The first example of currency debasement dates back to the Roman Empire under emperor Nero around 60 A.D. Nero reduced the silver content in the denarius coins from 100% to 90% during his tenure.

Emperor Vespasian and his son Titus had enormous expenditures via post-civil war reconstruction projects like the building of the Colosseum, compensation to the victims of the Vesuvius eruption, and the Great Fire of Rome in 64 A.D. The chosen means to survive the financial crisis was to reduce the silver content of the “denarius” from 94% to 90%.

Titus’ brother and successor, Domitian, saw enough value in “hard money” and the stability of a credible money supply that he increased the silver content of the denarius back to 98% — a decision he had to revert when another war broke out, and inflation was looming again across the empire.

This process gradually continued until the silver content measured just 5% in the following centuries. The Empire began to experience severe financial crises and inflation as the money continued to be devalued — particularly during the 3rd century A.D., sometimes referred to as the “Crisis of the Third Century.” During this period, spanning from about A.D. 235 to A.D. 284, Romans demanded higher wages and an increase in the price of the goods they were selling to face currency depreciation. The era was marked by political instability, external pressures from barbarian invasions, and internal issues such as economic decline and plague.

It was only when Emperor Diocletian and later Constantine took various measures, including introducing new coinage and implementing price controls, that the Roman economy began to stabilize. However, these events highlighted the vulnerabilities of the once-mighty Roman economic system.

Read More >> Hard To Soft Money: The Hyperinflation Of The Roman Empire

OTTOMAN EMPIRE

During the Ottoman Empire, the Ottoman official monetary unit, the akçe, was a silver coin that went through consistent debasement from 0.85 grams contained in a coin in the 15th century down to 0.048 grams in the 19th century. The measure to lower the intrinsic value of the coinage was taken to make more coins and increase the money supply. New currencies, the kuruş in 1688 and then the lira in 1844, gradually replaced the original official akçe due to its continuous debasement.

HENRY VIII

Under Henry VIII, England needed more money, so his chancellor started to debase the coins using cheaper metals like copper in the mix to make more coins for a more affordable cost. At the end of his reign, the silver content of the coins went down from 92.5% to only 25% as a way to make more money and fund the heavy military expenses the current European war was demanding.

WEIMAR REPUBLIC

During the Weimar Republic of the 1920s, the German government met its war and post-war financial obligations by printing more money. The measure reduced the mark’s value from around eight marks per dollar to 184. By 1922, the mark had depreciated to 7,350, eventually collapsing in a painful hyperinflation when it reached 4.2 trillion marks per USD.

History offers us poignant reminders of the perils of monetary expansion. These once-powerful empires all serve as cautionary tales for the modern fiat system. As these empires expanded their money supply, devaluing their currencies, they were, in many ways, like the proverbial lobster in boiling water. The temperature — or in this case, the rate of monetary debasement — increased so gradually that they failed to recognize the impending danger until it was too late. Just as a lobster doesn’t appear to realize it’s being boiled alive if the water’s temperature rises slowly, these empires didn’t grasp the full extent of their economic vulnerabilities until their systems became untenable.

The gradual erosion of their monetary value was not just an economic issue; it was a symptom of deeper systemic problems, signaling the waning strength of once-mighty empires.

DEBASEMENT IN THE MODERN ERA

The dissolution of the Bretton Woods system in the 1970s marked a pivotal moment in global economic history. Established in the mid-20th century, the Bretton Woods system had loosely tethered major world currencies to the U.S. dollar, which itself was backed by gold, ensuring a degree of economic stability and predictability.

However, its dissolution effectively untethered money from its golden roots. This shift granted central bankers and politicians greater flexibility and discretion in monetary policy, allowing for more aggressive interventions in economies. While this newfound freedom offered tools to address short-term economic challenges, it also opened the door to misuse and a gradual weakening of the economy.

In the wake of this monumental change, the US has experienced significant alterations in its monetary policy and money supply. By 2023, the monetary base had surged to 5.6 trillion dollars, representing an approximate 69-fold growth from its level of 81.2 billion dollars in 1971.

As we reflect on the modern era and the significant changes in U.S. monetary policy, it’s crucial to heed these historical lessons. Continuous debasement and unchecked monetary expansion can only go on for so long before the system reaches a breaking point.

EFFECTS OF DEBASEMENT

Currency debasement can have several significant effects on an economy, varying in magnitude depending on the extent of debasement and the underlying economic conditions.

Here are some of the most impactful consequences that currency debasement can generate over the long term.

Higher inflation rates

Higher inflation rates are the most immediate and impactful effects of currency debasement. As the currency’s value decreases, it takes more units to purchase the same goods and services, eroding the purchasing power of money.

Increasing Interest Rates

Central banks may respond to currency debasement and rising inflation by increasing interest rates, which can impact borrowing costs, business investments, and consumer spending patterns.

Deteriorating the Value of Savings

Currency debasement can deteriorate the value of savings held in the domestic currency. This is particularly detrimental to individuals with fixed-income assets, such as retirees who rely on pensions or interest income.

More Expensive Imports

A debased currency can make imports more expensive, potentially leading to higher costs for businesses and consumers reliant on foreign goods. However, it may also make exports more competitive internationally, as foreign buyers can purchase domestic goods at a lower price.

Undermining Public Confidence in the Economy

Continuous currency debasement can undermine public confidence in the domestic currency and the government’s ability to manage the economy effectively. This loss of trust may further exacerbate economic instability and even hyperinflation.

SOLUTION TO DEBASEMENT

The solution to debasement lies in the reintroduction of sound money — money whose supply cannot be easily manipulated. While many nostalgically yearn for a return to the gold standard, which was arguably superior to contemporary systems, it is not the ultimate solution. The reason lies in the centralization of gold by central banks. Should we revert to a gold standard, history would likely repeat itself, leading to confiscation and the debasement of currencies once again. Put simply, if a currency can be debased, it will be.

How Bitcoin Avoids Debasement

Bitcoin offers a permanent solution to this issue. Its supply is capped at 21 million, a number that is hard-coded and safeguarded by proof-of-work mining and a decentralized network of nodes. Thanks to its decentralized nature, no single entity or government can control Bitcoin’s issuance or governance. Furthermore, its inherent scarcity makes it resilient to the inflationary pressures that are typically seen with traditional fiat currencies.

As a distributed system, Bitcoin users can ensure that the supply never deviates from the predetermined supply cap by running the software that downloads and validates the entire transactional ledger. By verifying every transaction in Bitcoin’s history, where every coin came from and where it went, users can be absolutely sure that the supply has not been debased and no coins were created that should not have been.

Full node software like this for Bitcoin is essentially a counterfeiting detection machine that anyone can run. It guarantees the supply is intact, that coins being spent were properly authorized, and no funny business is happening. Any Bitcoin wallet software can also ensure that no one can restrict your access to your own money.

In times of economic uncertainty, or when central banks engage in extensive money printing, investors often turn to assets like gold and bitcoin for their store-of-value properties. As time progresses, there’s potential for people to recognize Bitcoin not just as a store of value, but as the next evolution of money.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
NBTC

Related Posts

Price Breaks All-Time High Record Again – Here’s What We Know

04/08/2025

Bitcoin Switzerland? El Salvador to Host First Fully Native Bitcoin Capital Markets

04/08/2025

Bitcoin Breaks $119K, but XLM and HBAR Aren’t Impressed by Its Meager Percentage Gain

04/08/2025

High-Stakes Consolidation Could Define Q3 Trend

04/08/2025
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Top Posts
Get Informed

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from NBTC regarding crypto, blockchains and web3 related topics.

Your source for the serious news. This website is crafted specifically to for crazy and hot cryptonews. Visit our main page for more tons of news.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn RSS
Top Insights

Philippines’ Digital Bank Maya Looks to US Market for Up to $1B IPO

20/03/2026

Amundi tokenized fund SAFO signals adoption of on-chain asset management

20/03/2026

Evegny Gokhberg: Market neutral DeFi strategies are essential for volatility, why diversification isn’t enough to manage risks, and the future of capital in DeFi

20/03/2026
Get Informed

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from NBTC regarding crypto, blockchains and web3 related topics.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.