Opinion
Guest
Essay
Crypto Is
Pointless. Not Even the White House Can Fix That.
Feb. 26,
2026
By Ryan
Cummings and Jared Bernstein
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/26/opinion/crypto-trump-bitcoin-clarity-genius.html
Mr.
Cummings was a member of President Joe Biden’s Council of Economic Advisers, on
which Mr. Bernstein served as chair.
Since its
peak last fall, Bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurrency, has lost almost
half its value. Nearly $2 trillion of wealth has evaporated from the global
crypto market since October.
We have
one question. What took so long? Outside of crimes and scams, the technology is
useless, and its economics are even worse.
The
answer is that crypto was held aloft for months by a period of euphoria that
followed the extraordinary support the industry gained in the Trump
administration. The crypto bros who spent millions getting Donald Trump elected
seemed to get virtually everything they might want: a longtime industry
investor elevated to White House adviser; one type of crypto given the
imprimatur of the federal government; the near annihilation of effective
regulatory scrutiny; invitations to White House dinners hosted by Mr. Trump.
But
instead of cementing crypto’s legitimacy, the administration has only pulled
back the curtain on the fundamental worthlessness of its assets. At a time when
investors have grown skittish about riskier assets, the value of Bitcoin has
fallen nearly 50 percent since October, dropping to below $70,000, proving it
was only a matter of time before crypto faced the critical lens it always
needed but never truly received.
When we
entered the White House in 2021, crypto was lobbying up faster than any
industry we’ve ever seen. Eager to shape its regulatory future and enter the
world of mainstream finance, the industry hired an army of lobbyists to draft
laws and regulations giving its notoriously volatile currencies the backing and
legitimacy of our government. By doing so, its major investors believed, they
could elevate the “systemic importance” of crypto so that they could be made
whole from any future crash via a potentially taxpayer-funded bailout. One of
the industry’s main facilitators, Senator Cynthia Lummis, a Wyoming Republican
nicknamed the Crypto Queen, received over $50,000 in campaign contributions
from the crypto industry and investors just weeks before sponsoring a
pro-crypto bill.
In our
role as government economists, we initially kept an open mind about crypto’s
potential merits. From 2021 to 2022 we sat in dozens of meetings in which
crypto firms and their backers assured us that the blockchain, the technology
underlying crypto, would do everything from increase access to the financial
system to replace the internet as we knew it.
Yet when
we asked independent experts about these claims, we encountered sharp pushback.
If this technology is that revolutionary, why weren’t any of the giant tech
firms using it? Were they too shortsighted to see the technological revolution
unfolding before them? Or was the technology — which we learned was essentially
a painfully slow and expensive database — just not that special?
As
economists of the Council of Economic Advisers, we aired our concerns in the
2023 Economic Report of the President. Crypto is at best a form of private
money, which has a long history of ending up in financial ruin. At worst, it is
a speculative and highly volatile asset with almost no practical use, whose
backers were (and still are) constantly trying to embed it into the financial
system, both to increase its adoption and, should the market nosedive, stick
taxpayers with the bill.
Given our
research and the collapse of the major crypto firm FTX due to fraudulent
activity of its founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, the Biden administration adopted a
cautious approach that included increasingly aggressive regulatory efforts to
curb scams and frauds. Many other prominent crypto firms also collapsed in that
period, leading to a huge sell-off of Bitcoin and similar currencies.
This
period — referred to as “crypto winter”— could have led to a deeper evaluation
of whether crypto was delivering its promised benefits. Instead, the industry
concluded that it had to control more of the rules that govern crypto’s
standing in financial markets. That, in turn, meant they needed to buy a lot
more political power. So, in 2024, they lavished over $100 million on
pro-crypto candidates including Mr. Trump.
He
swiftly made good on his vow to be a friend of the industry. He helped push
through legislation that brought stablecoins firmly inside the regulatory
perimeter of the U.S. banking system. And with the longtime crypto investor
David Sacks working as Mr. Trump’s “A.I. and crypto czar,” he endorsed a range
of other actions to bolster the industry and foster crypto’s broad adoption.
Now, Senator Lummis and her Republican colleague Bernie Moreno of Ohio, who was
elected with the help of the industry, are pushing to set up a
government-funded reserve whose sole purpose appears to be to juice the value
of Bitcoin.
The
administration is also working to pass a bill known as the Clarity Act. Not
only would it give the government’s regulatory blessing to an additional set of
cryptocurrencies, it would allow small cryptocurrencies to pitch themselves to
ordinary investors without any of the consumer protections that commonly
accompany such securities — a recipe ripe for disaster.
Naturally,
the administration’s moves initially sent crypto values soaring, with the price
of Bitcoin rising almost 20 percent in the 10 months after Mr. Trump’s 2025
inauguration.
Yet all
of that financial and government support, accompanied by a period of soaring
crypto values, still failed to win over consumers. The share of Americans
holding crypto has been stuck at around 30 percent for the past four years.
Demand is so slack that the owners of the heavy-duty hardware that mines new
crypto are increasingly turning it into A.I. data centers. At the same time,
investors worried about an A.I. bubble are increasingly ditching riskier, more
speculative assets — the more speculative the asset, the earlier it was
punished. That explains why Bitcoin started plummeting three weeks before tech
stocks began to wobble. Clearly, despite its many wins in Washington, crypto
has made little progress on its attempts to be integrated into the real
economy.
Of
course, the industry may simply have erred in tying its fortunes to Mr. Trump.
He and his family have already harvested an estimated $1.4 billion from various
cryptocurrencies. As Paul Krugman has argued, these crypto geniuses may have
bought themselves the wrong president.
There
will be freshmen entering college this year who were born after Bitcoin’s
debut. Yet in all this time, with the exception of individuals using it to wire
money to recipients in other countries, crypto seems to have mainly proved
itself adept at facilitating criminal activity. Just this week, the crypto firm
Binance, whose founder was pardoned by Mr. Trump in October for violating
money-laundering laws, fired or suspended several employees who found that $1.7
billion in cryptocurrencies “had flowed from two Binance accounts to Iranian
entities with links to terrorist groups,” The Times reported.
No one
can say with certainty what crypto will be worth in the future. But with what
we view as the most crypto-friendly administration, and friendly members of
Congress, its boosters have run out of excuses. They may now also be running
out of time.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário