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I recently read about how our currencies actually work, and I was surprised by something we probably overlook: the fiat currency we use every day is basically trust printed on paper. No gold backing, nothing tangible. Just bills that are worth because the government says they are and because we all believe in it.
Think about it carefully. The real, the dollar, the euro — they are all examples of fiat currency. They have no intrinsic value like gold did. Their purchasing power depends entirely on three things: that the government has the authority to issue it, that people use it in transactions, and that they trust it will be worth the same tomorrow.
The interesting part is that this wasn’t always the case. In China, during the Song Dynasty between 960 and 1279, the first paper bills appeared. Before that, the world operated on the gold standard — each bill in circulation was backed by metal reserves. That changed after World War I, when governments began adopting the fiat currency system we know today.
The key difference is this: with gold, if a government printed more bills without having the corresponding metal, the currency would automatically devalue. Today, there’s no such physical limitation. A government can print as much as it wants, and that’s exactly what causes inflation or hyperinflation when they lose control.
The advantages of fiat currency are clear. It’s cheap to produce — just printed paper. It’s accepted worldwide, which facilitates international trade. And it’s easy to transport and store compared to gold bars.
But the disadvantages are just as significant. Without backing in anything tangible, fiat currency is completely exposed to the risk of devaluation. And here’s the critical part: everything depends on trust. If the population loses faith in the government or economic stability, the value collapses quickly.
Now, this is where the conversation about cryptocurrencies comes in. While fiat currency is centralized — controlled by central banks and governments — Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are completely decentralized. There’s no central authority issuing them. Their value doesn’t come from trust in an institution but from supply and demand in the market.
It’s a fundamental difference. With fiat currency, the government can intervene, control, regulate. With cryptocurrencies, that’s not possible. Transactions happen freely without intermediaries.
In the end, understanding how fiat currency works helps you see why cryptocurrencies emerged in the first place. They are responses to systems that depend on trust in central institutions. And that’s something worth reflecting on, especially as you see how financial markets evolve.