I'm a bitcoin maxi, but I feel many/most Bitcoiners think tokenisation is just another medium for scams, which it has been. I want to know if my view is shared generally in these circles, or if it's novel.
I have no problem with tokenisation. Tokens are debt, you buy tokens from systems that don't have any money but do have potential to earn money (bitcoin) in the future and can therefore buy back the token or roll over the debt.
But once the debt is paid the person or machine or institution is fully solvent they can pay out in actual money rather than continuing to issue tokens, the goal is always to pay down, so as not to get labelled a Ponzi.
Tokens could be issued to cover demand cycles where they have not saved enough money in good times but are still solvent, if there is likely to be an uptick in demand.
But tokenisation can only work on the other side of the transition to a Bitcoin standard because when denominated in fiat there is a political incentive to debase the currency like Albania in the mid-90s. This is why we have securities laws. Tokens are a type of security, and those have to be regulated on a fiat standard to ensure proper disclosures. In a decentralised system you require the market to police fraud and softer kinds of bad behaviour, bit since governments are both constituted of and in themselves market participants that creates a perverse incentive if they can influence monetary policy. That's why central banks are in such uneasy partnerships with governments, required to perform certain functions of government and therefore subject to politics, while also being responsible for upholding the integrity of the currency.
In Albania politicians and bureaucrats pumped stock prices to make citizens feel wealthier by debasing the national currency, similar to how house prices were pumped in the 00s in Europe and America, or how they used monetary policy to pay the population to be compliant, only to steal the money back in inflation. Whatever the dominant asset is at the time, people vote for politicians to influence policy in favour of their assets, even if it's just a feeling of getting wealthier.
Bitcoin bootloads itself via that incentive, putting politicians in office who are public bitcoin champions, or at least not opposed to us and I'm favour of deregulation. But the end game is that this entire game of debasing the currency to pump asset prices is impossible, once bitcoin is the unit of account, it's become recognised as the most stable money with better monetary properties than the incumbent standard.
At that point it's possible to completely deregulate the securities market and literally anything or anyone can issue their own token without the power to influence a class of people to pump the token they issue, and they don't need to comply with securities laws to disclose their earnings or anything like that. Regulation privatised, where capital allocators pay systems to enforce compliance with the standards of disclosure they want, but people are free to invest in hyper-local or distributed or niche token issuers if there is sufficient information asymmetry to justify the risk of foregoing standards of disclosure.
A student could issue a token to pay for college buy back the token with their future salary. Universities could use endowments to buy those tokens, aligning incentives in education. Similar models could apply to machinery, cars in service businesses like transport, local devolved governments formed out of separatist governments from bankrupted states. Starter homes could be funded by tokens issued by families who collateralise real assets like bitcoin or the underlying land.
It's all to play for, but not until we are on a bitcoin standard, which could be 20 years away. Anyone disagree?