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by BLKNSLVR
1745 days ago
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> If certain kinds of transactions are currently cheaper, it's due to lack of regulation I just can't see any truth in that statement, but admittedly I'm probably looking at it from a different angle to you. Cryptocurrency cuts out the middleman in a transaction, or at least minimises the cost and 'touch' of a middleman, and that's where the cheaper-ness comes from - no vampiric-squid-encircling-the-globe sized multi-national taking its monopolistic percentage. That's my angle. The behaviour of said percentage-takers over the last century haven't exactly made regulation the saviour of the common citizenry either. |
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It's because regulation says only certain institutions are allowed to perform certain transactions, and have to perform certain checks, etc. I'm not saying there aren't inefficiencies that aren't directly related to regulation, eg. monopolistic behaviours. But that's the side-effect/price you pay for some kind of oversight. There is of course lots of room for improvement in the systems/regulation we have.
When you look at the history of where the regulations came from, it's usually in response to a major crisis. Humans tend to be reactionary, especially the ones in positions of power when they're enacting laws that limit their paymasters.
> The behaviour of said percentage-takers over the last century haven't exactly made regulation the saviour of the common citizenry either.
Look at the most recent major economic crisis of 2008. The main reason it was so devastating was due to rolling back regulation from previous crises, along with "innovative" financial products that regulators had turned a blind eye to. What do you think would have happened to business lending (ie. jobs) and the stock market (ie. people's pensions) if there had been zero regulation and no ability to inject liquidity into the system?