A New Fed Working Paper Aims to Rein in Bitcoin With Taxes or Prohibition—Here’s Why It’s Flawed

By: bitcoin.com|2025/07/09 08:58:52
0
Share
copy

In a working paper, Amol Amol and Erzo G.J. Luttmer from the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis argue that prohibiting bitcoin or imposing specific taxes could help governments implement permanent primary deficits effectively. Their research explores the impact of bitcoin on fiscal policies and offers potential solutions.

The Case Against Bitcoin: The Minneapolis Federal Reserve’s Study

Amol and Luttmer’s working paper examines how the presence of bitcoin (BTC), ironically referred to as a “useless piece of paper,” complicates the government’s ability to maintain a permanent primary deficit policy. According to the research, the trade of bitcoin undermines the implementation of such policies by creating alternative steady states where the government’s strategies may not hold. The working paper emphasizes that in a scenario where bitcoin is legally prohibited, or where a specific tax rate is applied to it, these fiscal policies can regain their effectiveness.

The authors propose two primary solutions for governments: a legal prohibition against trading bitcoin or the imposition of a tax at the rate of -(r – g), where r denotes the real interest rate and g the economy’s growth rate. By setting this tax greater than zero, governments can eliminate equilibria where bitcoin trades at positive prices. This action would theoretically prevent bitcoin from destabilizing fiscal policies aimed at sustaining permanent primary deficits, restoring unique policy implementation in the affected economy.


The working paper dives into the technical details of how these solutions would work. Amol and Luttmer use economic modeling to demonstrate that without such interventions, bitcoin introduces indeterminacy into fiscal policy implementation. In particular, bitcoin’s trade creates multiple potential equilibria that complicate the government’s fiscal management, such as leading to a “balanced budget trap” where the government is unable to sustain primary deficits due to competing value in bitcoin.

Amol and Luttmer emphasize the need for decisive government action. They suggest that prohibiting or taxing bitcoin is a form of financial repression but argue that it may be necessary to maintain fiscal stability. The authors caution that alternative strategies to regulate bitcoin would need to be carefully designed to avoid abrupt market shifts or unintended consequences. Their findings align with broader concerns from government agencies and bureaucrats about the challenges digital currencies pose to traditional fiscal policies.


Despite the 37-page effort, the prohibition or taxation of bitcoin to support permanent deficits is flawed on multiple fronts. First, it underestimates bitcoin’s resistance to centralized control, undermining the feasibility of outright prohibition​. Second, from an ethical standpoint, financial repression, like prohibitive taxation or bans, involves coercive intervention, violating principles of voluntary exchange essential to free markets and individual sovereignty. Lastly, government restrictions undermine market dynamics, inhibiting the organic development of value systems independent of fiat control​​.

Applying math to the proposition that bitcoin prohibition or taxation can aid governments in maintaining permanent deficits is misguided because it treats human action and economic systems as static, linear equations. This overlooks the dynamic nature of markets and individual preferences. Human action is subjective and cannot be reduced to mathematical formulas. Economic behavior emerges from individual choices and value judgments, which are inherently unpredictable and unquantifiable. Using math to model fiscal control ignores the complexity of decentralized markets like bitcoin and human action in general.
 

-- Price

--

You may also like

Wosh: Inflation has cooled in recent weeks, AI is reshaping the economy, and forward guidance has lost its necessity

Federal Reserve Chairman Waller clearly stated at the ECB forum that the Fed will abandon forward guidance on interest rates, with future decisions relying entirely on real-time economic data. He noted that inflation risks in the U.S. have decreased over the past four weeks, but the ultimate impact ...

The most secretive AI winner

A century-old company that sells toilets and produces MSG has seen its stock price soar by "positioning" core materials for AI chips. This article clarifies the explosive opportunities for domestic substitution of semiconductor materials in the A-share market.

Former ByteDance employee's account: How I started with two Pinduoduo hard drives and made six times the profit with Seagate to achieve financial freedom?

A programmer from a big tech company bought hard drives on Pinduoduo and, following clues, managed to accurately capture the sixfold rising stock Seagate using the "finding daily anomalies + 13F institutional verification" framework, making a wild profit of $400,000 and achieving financial freedom.

MiCA reshuffle begins, Binance temporarily bids farewell to the EU

What Binance leaves behind is not scattered retail investors, but a whole batch of high-value users who are forced to liquidate and have almost nowhere to go.

How does Gate redo "buying and selling stocks" from the cryptocurrency world to the stock market?

The competition logic of exchanges has changed.

Visa and Mastercard join 140 giants to launch a new stablecoin, but the impact on the market landscape may still be limited

As an important milestone event in the stablecoin landscape, OUSD is likely to change the existing stablecoin landscape and significantly increase the adoption rate of stablecoins in the global financial system.

Popular coins

Latest Crypto News

Read more
iconiconiconiconiconiconicon
Customer Support:@weikecs
Business Cooperation:@weikecs
Quant Trading & MM:bd@weex.com
VIP Program:support@weex.com