Broken Money | Book Review

Broken Money: Ledgers, Power, and the Future of Money
The Ledger Framework of Money. In Episode 6 of the BitLemmas Podcast, Watson and B. Sovereign provide a comprehensive review of Lyn Alden’s book, Broken Money . The discussion moves beyond traditional economic theories to present a more effective mental model: money as a ledger governance system . By defining money as a combination of a ledger, governance rules, and network effects, the hosts explain how technological shifts reshape the ways we record and transfer value . This framework allows listeners to analyze any currency by identifying who can change its rules and what the consequences of those changes are for the users .
Understanding Broken Ledgers. The transcript identifies the primary characteristics of a failing monetary system, which includes deposit freezes, capital controls, and runaway inflation . These failures occur when the governance of a ledger is captured to serve a small group at the expense of the majority, often through the expansion of the money supply . This flexibility in state governed ledgers allows for the opaque redistribution of wealth, often benefiting those closest to the money printer while diluting the purchasing power of savers . The conversation also highlights why the modern banking system is fragile by design due to maturity transformation, which creates inherent instability when short term debts outweigh long term asset returns .
The Three Types of Monetary Ledgers. The hosts break down the evolution of money into three distinct categories based on their governance . Nature governed ledgers, such as gold, rely on physics and scarcity, making them difficult to manipulate . State governed ledgers, or fiat currencies, operate by decree with rules that are flexible and easily changed by political power . Finally, user governed ledgers, such as Bitcoin, function through open source consensus where rules are transparent and enforced by the users themselves . Each system carries different trade offs regarding portability, verifiability, and counterparty risk .
Strategies for the Modern Money Stack. The episode concludes with a practical framework for building a personal money stack to route around systemic constraints . B. Sovereign suggests that individuals should intentionally categorize their wealth into spending, emergency, savings, and escape layers . While traditional bank deposits offer convenience, they carry the risk of being unbanked or facing capital controls . The hosts encourage listeners to audit their exposure to state governed ledgers and consider tools like self custody and user governed assets to ensure they own a piece of a ledger that cannot be arbitrarily devalued or frozen