Old Utopias, New Tax Havens

S. Eich
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Cryptocurrencies are frequently framed as future-oriented, technological innovations that decentralize money, thereby liberating it from centralized governance and the political tentacles of the state. This is misleading on several counts. First, electronic currencies cannot leave the politics of money behind even where they aim to disavow it. Instead, we can understand their impact as a political attempt to depoliticize money. Second, the dramatic price swings of cryptocurrencies challenge their self-fashioning as a new form of money and reveal them instead as speculative assets and securities in need of regulation. While the preferential tax and regulatory treatment of cryptocurrencies hinges on their nominal currency status, it is ironically precisely their success as speculative assets that has undermined these claims. Finally, far from heralding a radical break with the past, electronic currencies serve as a reminder of the unresolved global politics of money since the 1970s. To support these three interrelated theses this chapter places the rise of cryptocurrencies in the historical context of the international politics of money between the end of the Bretton Woods system and the response to the 2008 Financial Crisis.
旧乌托邦,新避税天堂
加密货币经常被认为是面向未来的技术创新,可以分散资金,从而将其从集中治理和国家的政治触手中解放出来。这在几个方面具有误导性。首先,电子货币无法将货币政治抛在脑后,即使它们的目标是否认它。相反,我们可以把它们的影响理解为一种使金钱非政治化的政治尝试。其次,加密货币价格的剧烈波动挑战了它们作为一种新货币形式的自我塑造,并揭示了它们是需要监管的投机性资产和证券。虽然对加密货币的税收优惠和监管待遇取决于它们的名义货币地位,但具有讽刺意味的是,它们作为投机资产的成功恰恰削弱了这些说法。最后,电子货币远没有预示着与过去的彻底决裂,而是提醒人们,自上世纪70年代以来,全球货币政治一直悬而未决。为了支持这三个相互关联的论点,本章将加密货币的兴起置于布雷顿森林体系结束和对2008年金融危机的反应之间的国际货币政治的历史背景中。
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