Every monetary system rests on a foundation of trust. Whether that trust is placed in a central bank, a government, a gold reserve, or an algorithmic protocol, money only functions when enough people believe it will hold its value and move reliably between hands.
For centuries, that trust has been institutional, mediated by banks, regulated by states, and enforced by legal systems. Cryptocurrency challenges this arrangement at its most fundamental level.
The old system has most countries ultimately reliant on the government and its legal system.
This is what the "trust layer" that fiat money has functioned on looks like.
Crypto assets move that trust away from the familiar centralized systems to something else.
Although, the phrase "trustless" is often thrown around when addressing crypto protocols, systems or solutions which leads to a misrepresentation of meaning, but what that usually entail is the absence of centralized intermediaries, not that there isn't a trust layer at all.
There's still a trust element, just in a very different form.
Solutions born in a crisis
The best solutions or at least, the most marketable ones, are built around existing problems with high demand for a fix. As a result, it helps to try understanding what crypto redefines by looking at what it was built to replace.
Research shows that the Bitcoin white paper was published on October 31, 2008, by the pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto, at the precise moment when global trust in traditional financial institutions was collapsing. The document reportedly landed over two weeks after the U.S. government announced a $700 billion bank bailout package under the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act. Hedge funds, central banks, and financial conglomerates had made over-leveraged bets on the economy, socialized their losses onto taxpayers, and largely escaped accountability.
The Bitcoin solution was born amidst a crisis.
People needed an alternative to a system that was too reliant on the actions of a few persons chasing profits at the expense of everyone and everything else.
What Bitcoin was offering wasn't the absence of trust, but a shift away from placing trust in a centralized body.
Incentives is the new trust layer enforced by math
Crypto's monetary system is fundamentally incentives layers built on math deployed as code of rules, on-chain.
The conventional monetary system operates on what economists call a trust hierarchy. At the apex sits the central bank, which issues base money and serves as the lender of last resort. Below it are commercial banks, which extend credit, hold deposits, and execute payments.
Individuals and businesses trust this hierarchy because the state backstops it through deposit insurance, regulatory oversight, legal recourse, and, when all else fails, the printing press.
Blockchain-based systems replace this hierarchy with a different mechanism.
That mechanism is incentives. And it does this by "distributing" trust.
Let me say that again:
Blockchains do not eliminate trust they distribute it. Power and trust are shared among the network's stakeholders, developers, miners, validators, and users rather than concentrated in a single individual or institution such as a bank or government.
This means, essentially, that the monetary layer is simultaneously also the governance layer of the entire network's economic system.
The reason this works is because incentives are at the center of it all and the other side of these incentives is a costly risk factor.
So trust isn't merely distributed, that distribution is rewarded and any act of bad faith is punished with a great loss.
One way to phrase is that crypto redefines trust by, ironically, "trusting" the math that groups of diverse humans will rather play fair "collectively" for perceived rewards than risk an individual great loss.