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In 1984, a Nobel laureate in Economics said a sentence. 42 years later, that sentence has become a reality.
Friedrich Hayek: "I don't believe we can get good money back from the government. The only thing we can do is introduce something they cannot stop, in some clever, roundabout way."
"A sly, roundabout way."
Eight years after making that statement, Hayek passed away. He never saw the internet. He never saw the cypherpunk movement. He never saw the 2008 financial crisis. He never saw Satoshi Nakamoto's white paper.
But the logic he described almost perfectly matches the path of Bitcoin's birth.
Government monopoly on currency issuance → inevitable inflation → the public needs an alternative → this alternative must be decentralized to the point where the government cannot shut it down.
In 1976, Hayek wrote "The Denationalization of Money," which mainly advocated for allowing private entities to issue competing currencies. The European Central Bank later explicitly acknowledged that Bitcoin's decentralized philosophy is rooted in Hayek's theory.
But there is a key difference here.
Hayek envisioned "competitive private currencies"—multiple banks issuing different money, letting the market choose the best. Bitcoin took a completely different route: not "better banks," but "no banks needed."
One is an improvement. The other is a revolution.
Hayek probably wouldn't fully agree with Bitcoin—after all, he was an Austrian School economist, not an anarchist. But he would understand why BTC has survived to this day.
Because he was right: good money cannot be bestowed by the government. It can only grow from the cracks.
BTC today is $65,600, down 24.6% this year. The market fear index is 13.
But some things are not measured by price. That "unstoppable thing" Hayek spoke of is already here.