The Hangman’s Rope: How the USSR Created the Eurodollar Market That Later Strangled It
Posted on | May 17, 2026 | No Comments
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Pennings, A.J. (2026, May 17) The Hangman’s Rope: How the USSR Created the Eurodollar Market That Later Strangled It. apennings.com https://apennings.com/dystopian-economies/the-hangmans-rope-how-the-ussr-created-the-eurodollar-market-that-later-strangled-it/
“The capitalists will sell us the rope with which we will hang them.” – Attributed to Vladimir Lenin
Introduction
The “Third World Debt Crisis” of the 1980s was a decisive global stress test that indirectly, but powerfully, accelerated the breakup of the USSR. The same computational mechanisms that had trapped debtor nations in the Eurodollar’s master spreadsheet turned against the Soviet bloc. Petrodollar recycling, Eurodollar floating-rate loans, and the Volcker shock exposed the command economy’s inability to operate in the synchronized global ledger of spreadsheet capitalism.
The Eurodollar market did not merely contribute to the USSR’s downfall; it was the rope the Soviets themselves had braided in 1957 and then willingly placed around their own neck in the 1970s. The Debt Crisis that disciplined Latin America was simply the dress rehearsal for the USSR’s dissolution and the privatization that ended its Communism. The Soviet Union was the main act for Eurodollar retribution. The rise of SACT (Substitution, Abstraction, Computation, and Telecom synchronization) transformed capitalism into a globally integrated spreadsheet system whose computational dynamics exceeded the planning and coordination capacities of Soviet institutions.
From the SACT perspective, the Soviet collapse can be interpreted as the failure of an industrial command economy to survive the rise of global spreadsheet capitalism. The USSR did not merely lose the Cold War. It lost the transition from industrial bureaucracy to informational-financial coordination.
The master spreadsheet that the USSR inadvertently helped globalize ultimately recalibrated the Soviet future out of existence. This investigation, therefore, records these events as Spreadsheet Capitalism’s purest historical demonstration, creates the system that detaches value from sovereignty, borrows from it excessively, and watches the logic enforce its own indexical discipline, without mercy and without exception.
What began as a defensive Cold War tactic to shield Soviet dollar holdings from US seizure evolved into the planet’s first unregulated, floating-rate credit machine. The Soviets, having helped birth it, later borrowed so heavily from it that the spreadsheet stack’s own indexical logic turned lethal and doomed the USSR.
The irony is profound. The Soviet Union played a foundational role in creating the Eurodollar market during the late 1950s as a defensive strategy against possible American seizure of Soviet dollar deposits. Yet by the 1970s and 1980s, the USSR had become increasingly dependent on borrowing from the same offshore dollar system. The rope had indeed been braided and eventually tightened around the Soviet economy itself.
The Beginnings of the Eurodollar and the Infusions of Petrodollar
After the 1956 Hungarian crisis and Suez tensions, the USSR feared Washington would freeze its dollar deposits held inside American banks. On February 28, 1957, Moscow Narodny Bank (MNB) in London transferred $800,000 to a London merchant bank, creating the first documented Eurodollar transaction.[1] The dollars now sat on the books of a British-registered, Soviet-controlled entity. It was outside the US jurisdiction, including Regulation Q ceilings and reserve requirements. MNB and its Paris sister bank (whose telex code “EUROBANK” literally named the market) began accepting and lending offshore dollars.[2]
By the 1970s, the Eurodollar market had matured into a massive, unregulated liquidity pool, supercharged by the recycling of “petrodollars” following the 1973 and 1979 OPEC oil shocks.[3] The USSR and its Eastern European satellites began borrowing heavily from the unregulated Eurodollar market, just as Latin America did. Western commercial banks, led by figures like Walter Wriston of Citicorp, used global balance-sheet expansion to distribute syndicated, floating-rate loans across the globe [4].
Soviet hard-currency debt was modest at first ($10–15 billion in the mid-1970s), but as technology imports and grain purchases increased, the debt grew substantially. At the same time, oil revenues (the USSR was one of the world’s largest producers) provided the collateral for the borrowing.
The syndicated floating-rate Eurodollar loan system, in which one bank took the lead on a loan and others contributed smaller amounts, worked well as petrodollars flooded the market in the 1970s.[4] But it turned chaotic as USD interest rates increased. The 1980s Debt Crisis’s twin shocks then hit with full force:
The Volcker shock (1979–82) drove US interest rates sky-high, spiking LIBOR and the cost of servicing floating-rate Eurodollar debt across the entire bloc. The 1985–86 oil glut, partly a Saudi response to high US interest rates and the global recession, sent oil prices plunging from $30 to under $15 per barrel.[8] Soviet hard-currency export earnings (oil accounted for 60–70% of them) plummeted exactly when debt-service costs exploded.
Soviet external debt roughly doubled between 1984 and 1987, reaching about $55 billion by 1989 and approximately $105 billion (including Eastern European obligations Russia later assumed) by the 1991 collapse.[5,9]. Debt service consumed up to 30% of hard-currency earnings at the peak. Western banks, already burned by Latin defaults and the Baker/Brady restructurings, sharply curtailed new lending to the Soviet bloc after 1989. The global spreadsheet, now running on Bloomberg terminals and broadcast feeds, had recalibrated risk scores. Its computed conclusion was that command economies were no longer creditworthy.[10]
This external squeeze arrived precisely as the Soviet economy was already stagnating under Brezhnev-era central planning. The credit crunch and oil revenue collapse left Gorbachev with no room to maneuver. Perestroika and glasnost, intended as controlled reforms, were in large part desperate responses to the balance-of-payments crisis. The reforms destabilized the system instead of saving it.
Price liberalization, enterprise autonomy, and political openness eroded central control while the master spreadsheet continued to enforce its indexical discipline. Eastern European satellites, themselves strangled by the same debt dynamics, broke free in 1989; the USSR could no longer afford the subsidies or military presence that had held the bloc together. By 1991, the Soviet Union had lost access to international financial markets, its reserves were depleted, and the economy was contracting sharply. The August 1991 coup and the subsequent dissolution were the final political manifestations of an economy that the Bloomberg terminals had already rendered unsustainable.
In spreadsheet SACT terms, the 1980s Debt Crisis was the moment spreadsheet logic demonstrated it could recalibrate even a superpower outside its direct control. The Substitution layer, turning gold into the floating dollar, had long been complete; Abstraction had turned Soviet oil revenues and debt service into relational spreadsheet cells while Symbolic Computing repriced risk and yields in real time. Telecom Synchronization distributed the shocks planet-wide.
The USSR discovered the same truth Latin America had learned: once value lives as indexical signs computed across synchronized terminals, no command economy can opt out. The master spreadsheet reformulated the future, and the future no longer included the Soviet Union as a single node.
The Debt Crisis therefore did not directly cause the breakup, but it supplied the external financial guillotine that made Gorbachev’s internal reforms fatal. The stack’s logic had already won; the USSR simply ran out of time and hard currency.
The collapse of the Soviet Union can be interpreted not only as a geopolitical or ideological event, but as a crisis of symbolic coordination and computational incapacity. From a SACT perspective, the USSR was defeated as much by spreadsheet logic as by military rivalry. The Soviet system increasingly failed to compete within an emerging world economy organized through computerized finance, telecommunications networks, real-time accounting, and electronically mediated liquidity flows.
In this interpretation, the USSR did not simply “lose the Cold War.” It lost the transition from industrial bureaucracy to informational capitalism.
From Industrial Planning to Spreadsheet Capitalism
The Soviet economy was built on an earlier mode of coordination including centralized ministries, paper accounting, production quotas, material balances, slow statistical reporting, and politically mediated allocation. Its planning apparatus, centered around Gosplan, depended on hierarchical reporting chains that aggregated production data through bureaucratic layers. Although impressive in mobilizing heavy industry and wartime production, this system operated with extremely high informational latency.[11]
The Soviet economy could plan steel output or tractor production, but it struggled to dynamically coordinate global prices, interest rates, energy flows, consumer demand, currency risks, technological innovation, and cross-border capital movements.
Meanwhile, Western capitalism was undergoing a SACT transformation. Beginning in the 1960s and accelerating in the 1970s and 1980s, the West became increasingly organized through computerized accounting techniques. It began to use global telecommunications and spreadsheet software for floating exchange rates and derivatives pricing. Financial terminals emerged such as Reuter’s Dealing for offshore Eurodollar liquidity and Bloomberg’s “box” for electronic securities trading.
The emergence of applications like VisiCalc and later Lotus 1-2-3 transformed the PC into a decentralized planning machine for firms, banks, and financial markets. The spreadsheet became a portable symbolic engine capable of modeling cash flows, debt schedules, inventory systems, foreign exchange risks, and investment returns in real time.
This represented a major historical shift. Capitalism was no longer coordinated primarily through factories alone; it was increasingly coordinated through electronically synchronized balance sheets.
Spreadsheet Logic versus Soviet Planning
Spreadsheet logic introduced a new form of economic rationality. Instead of rigid five-year plans, firms could continuously recalculate expected returns, borrowing costs, exchange-rate risks, commodity exposures, repayment schedules, labor costs, and portfolio allocations.
The key advantage was recursive adaptability. Spreadsheets allowed institutions to continuously revise assumptions and recompute future scenarios. They dramatically lowered the informational friction of decision-making.
The Soviet system lacked this flexibility. Its planning infrastructure was optimized for industrial throughput, physical targets, and centralized reporting. But the emerging global economy increasingly depended on real-time financial calculation, decentralized forecasting, electronic liquidity management, and networked accounting systems.
The USSR encountered what might be called a computational crisis of socialism. The problem was not merely insufficient information, as Friedrich Hayek had argued decades earlier in the socialist calculation debate. Rather, the problem was that capitalism had developed new computational substrates that radically enhanced its ability to process and synchronize information globally. The Soviet Union remained tied to industrial-era accounting while capitalism evolved into spreadsheet capitalism.
The Eurodollar System and Soviet Vulnerability
The rise of the Eurodollar market intensified this imbalance. After the collapse of Bretton Woods in 1971, offshore dollar markets expanded rapidly through London and other international banks. Syndicated lending enhanced petrodollar recycling, while electronic settlement systems such as CHIPS and CHAPS provided private-sector clearing, payment, and settlement networks in the United States and London. CHIPS acts as a “netting engine” as it consolidates and offsets multiple transactions between banks into a single net amount, making it highly efficient. CHAPS (Clearing House Automated Payment System) is dedicated exclusively to processing high-value or urgent wholesale and retail payments in British Pounds (GBP).
These systems generated enormous global liquidity outside direct state planning structures. Western banks could dynamically create dollar credit through interconnected balance sheets supported by telecommunications and increasingly computerized accounting systems. The USSR, despite its military power, remained partially dependent on this global liquidity architecture.
Oil exports became central to Soviet hard-currency earnings. When oil prices collapsed in the 1980s after the earlier OPEC shocks and petrodollar boom, Soviet access to foreign exchange deteriorated severely.[5]
At the same time, US interest rates rose sharply under Paul Volcker, the Fed Chair trying to reduce inflation in the US. Global dollar liquidity tightened, and debt servicing costs increased worldwide.
The informational and financial infrastructure of spreadsheet capitalism amplified Soviet vulnerability. The USSR could not recursively adapt its economy at the speed of global financial markets.
Bloomberg, Reuters, and the Rise of Financial Networks
By the 1980s, financial terminals such as Bloomberg L.P. and Reuters transformed markets into continuously synchronized informational systems. These terminals distributed prices instantly, recalculated yields continuously, modeled derivatives, synchronized global traders, and integrated spreadsheets with telecommunications.
Walter Wriston of Citibank famously described the post-Bretton Woods world as operating under an “information standard.” But this was more specifically a spreadsheet-information standard. Value increasingly depended on the ability to model risk, synchronize information, compute future expectations, manage collateral, and coordinate liquidity flows.[10]
The Soviet Union possessed scientists, engineers, and military technologies, but it lacked equivalent global financial-computational infrastructures. Its economic system became informationally outpaced.
Privatization as Spreadsheet Transformation
The privatization of Soviet industries after 1991 can also be interpreted through SACT. Privatization was not simply a legal transfer of ownership. It was the conversion of Soviet industrial assets into spreadsheet-compatible financial objects. Factories, mines, pipelines, and energy systems were transformed into shares, bonds, collateral, balance-sheet entries, and cash-flow streams.
These could be valued using Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) models and through this mathematical lens, the physical inheritance of the Soviet state was fully absorbed into global capital markets. This process required valuation models, accounting standards, computerized ledgers, financial databases, and electronic settlement systems. Western advisors and institutions introduced market accounting, discounted cash flow analysis, privatization auctions, electronic banking systems, and securities markets.
Spreadsheet logic reorganized the post-Soviet economy. Assets previously embedded in political planning were abstracted into tradable financial claims. In SACT terms:
– Substitution converted physical industrial capacity into monetary assets.
– Abstraction rendered Soviet production computable as financial value.
– Computation enabled pricing, speculation, and leveraged acquisition.
– Telecom synchronization integrated post-Soviet assets into global capital markets.
Privatization therefore represented the deterritorialization of Soviet industry into global spreadsheet capitalism.
Shock Therapy and Recursive Instability
The “shock therapy” policies associated with figures such as Jeffrey Sachs accelerated this transformation. Prices were liberalized rapidly and subsidies were removed. State industries were privatized and sold off to the first round of oligarches. Currencies floated. But the computational infrastructures required for stable market coordination were weak or absent until the WTO liberalized tariffs on computer technologies and electronics.[13]
Western financial logic was imposed faster than institutional adaptation could occur. As a result inflation surged, oligarchic asset capture intensified, industrial production collapsed, and capital flight accelerated.
The post-Soviet transition revealed a crucial SACT insight. Spreadsheet capitalism is not merely software. It depends on deep institutional, legal, financial, and telecommunications infrastructures. Without those stabilizing layers, rapid financial abstraction can produce systemic fragmentation.
SACT and the End of Soviet Modernity
From a SACT perspective, the USSR collapsed because it could not successfully transition from industrial modernity to informational-financial modernity.The Soviet system excelled at centralized industrial mobilization, military production, physical infrastructure planning. But late twentieth-century capitalism increasingly operated through electronic liquidity, recursive financial modeling, spreadsheet-based valuation, and telecommunications synchronization through global collateral networks.
The Cold War was therefore also a competition between industrial bureaucracy and networked spreadsheet capitalism. The West’s advantage lay not simply in markets, but in computational coordination. The PC spreadsheet, the financial terminal, the Eurodollar market, and the telecommunications network became geopolitical technologies.
They enabled capitalism to continuously recompute and reorganize global economic relations at a scale and speed the Soviet planning apparatus could not match. In this sense, the breakup of the USSR was not only the collapse of a state. It was the collapse of an alternative computational regime.
From a SACT perspective, the USSR did not simply lose an ideological contest with the West; it became entangled within a global financial system increasingly organized around offshore dollar creation, floating interest rates, computerized debt management, and electronically synchronized balance sheets. The Soviet Union’s dependence on Eurodollar borrowing during the 1970s and 1980s exposed it to the recursive dynamics of global spreadsheet logic at precisely the moment capitalism was transitioning into what Walter Wriston called the “information standard.” The Soviet crisis was therefore not only political or industrial. It was monetary, computational, and infrastructural.[10]
Oil Shocks, Petrodollars, and the Expansion of Eurodollar Credit
The roots of Soviet indebtedness lay partly in the transformation of the global monetary system after the collapse of Bretton Woods in 1971. When the United States suspended dollar-gold convertibility, the world shifted from a gold-constrained monetary order to a floating dollar system increasingly mediated through offshore banking networks.
At the same time, the OPEC oil shocks of 1973 and 1979 generated enormous surpluses for oil-exporting states. These “petrodollars” were deposited into Western banks, particularly in London and New York, which then recycled them as loans to governments and state enterprises around the world.
The Eurodollar market exploded. International banks created offshore dollar credit beyond direct US reserve requirements and domestic banking regulations. These Eurodollars circulated through telex systems, computerized ledgers, correspondent banking networks, and increasingly sophisticated financial terminals. What emerged was a planetary liquidity machine driven by balance-sheet expansion.
The USSR became partially integrated into this system.
Although the Soviet Union remained politically outside Western capitalism, it increasingly relied on Western credit markets for technology imports, grain purchases, industrial equipment, infrastructure modernization, and access to convertible currencies.[6] Soviet planners discovered that Eurodollar borrowing offered access to relatively cheap liquidity during the 1970s era of low real interest rates and abundant petrodollar recycling. In SACT terms, the USSR entered the dollar system not primarily through ideological conversion, but through liquidity dependence.
Eurodollar Debt as Spreadsheet Logic
Eurodollar lending and its subset, petrodollar recycling, was fundamentally a spreadsheet phenomenon. Western banks increasingly used computerized accounting systems and spreadsheet applications such as VisiCalc and Lotus 1-2-3 to model sovereign debt exposure,
floating-rate interest payments, currency risks, repayment schedules, commodity revenues, collateral positions, and refinancing needs.
Debt ceased to be merely a diplomatic relationship between states. It became a continuously recalculated numerical process. The USSR’s obligations were increasingly inserted into global banking spreadsheets alongside those of Latin American borrowers, African states, Eastern European governments, and multinational corporations.
Soviet debt therefore became part of the recursive circuitry of offshore dollar liquidity. This was historically significant because the Soviet economy had originally been designed to avoid dependence on capitalist finance. Yet by the late 1970s, Soviet modernization increasingly required participation in the very global credit architecture capitalism controlled.
The Volcker Shock and the Recalculation of Soviet Risk
The turning point came with the Volcker shock. In 1979, Paul Volcker dramatically increased US interest rates to combat inflation. The Federal Funds rate surged above 20 percent. This transformed the global spreadsheet overnight.[7]
Because much Eurodollar debt was issued at floating interest rates, the rise in US rates immediately propagated through syndicated loans,
interbank lending, sovereign debt obligations, and offshore credit markets.
Financial terminals at banks in London, New York, Zurich, and Tokyo recursively recalculated higher debt-service burdens, lower commodity revenues, increased refinancing risks, and deteriorating sovereign balance sheets.
The Soviet Union was caught inside this recalculation cycle. Its debt payments rose sharply just as oil prices weakened, export earnings slowed, technological stagnation intensified, and military expenditures remained high. The spreadsheet logic of global finance amplified Soviet vulnerability.
The USSR could not control the interest-rate architecture governing its dollar liabilities because the computational center of the system remained external. The power was held at the Federal Reserve, with Eurodollar banks, in Western capital markets, and among terminals in the emerging financial information networks.
Telecommunications and the Synchronization of Debt
The Eurodollar system depended on telecommunications. It started with telegrams and telex in the 1950s and 1960s. By the late 1970s and 1980s satellite communications, Reuters terminals, SWIFT messaging, and computerized settlement systems enabled near-continuous synchronization of global balance sheets.
This was a new form of monetary power. The United States no longer needed to ship gold. Dollar liquidity operated through informational infrastructures.
Walter Wriston’s “information standard” was therefore deeply tied to spreadsheet logic. Global finance increasingly depended on the ability to monitor debt, model risk, calculate interest-rate sensitivity, forecast liquidity shortages, and electronically coordinate capital flows.
The Soviet planning system lacked equivalent infrastructures. Gosplan operated through delayed reporting chains and industrial accounting methods optimized for production targets, not dynamic liquidity management. Soviet institutions could measure tons of steel or coal output, but they struggled to manage recursively fluctuating dollar liabilities linked to global interest-rate movements. In effect, the USSR became exposed to a computational environment it could not fully model or control.
Debt Dependence and the Weakening of Soviet Sovereignty
Eurodollar borrowing weakened Soviet autonomy in several ways. First, it tied Soviet economic stability to global dollar liquidity conditions. Second, it increased dependence on Western banks and financial institutions. Third, it exposed Soviet planners to floating-rate volatility that could not be centrally planned. Fourth, it pressured the USSR to generate hard-currency exports, especially energy sales. This produced a paradox.
The Soviet Union remained militarily opposed to capitalism while becoming financially dependent on capitalist liquidity circuits. In SACT terms, Soviet sovereignty became partially subordinated to the spreadsheet logic of offshore dollar finance.
Privatization as USD Integration
The collapse of the USSR accelerated this process. During the 1990s, post-Soviet privatization transformed Soviet industrial assets into globally tradable financial objects. Oil companies, factories, pipelines, and mineral resources were valued through discounted cash-flow models, incorporated into computerized ledgers, linked to international banking systems, and integrated into global dollar markets.
Spreadsheet logic reorganized the post-Soviet economy. Assets previously managed through political planning were abstracted into securities, collateral, debt instruments, and privatized revenue streams. This transition was facilitated by Western accounting standards, PC spreadsheets, financial terminals, electronic securities systems, and telecommunications networks. The Soviet industrial economy became deterritorialized into global financial spreadsheets.
SACT and the Computational Defeat of the USSR
From a SACT perspective, the USSR was not simply defeated militarily or ideologically. It was recursively destabilized through integration into a rapidly emerging dollar-liquidity system governed by spreadsheet capitalism.
The rise of Eurodollar lending, floating interest rates, electronic securities, telecommunications networks, and computerized financial modeling transformed global power. The key geopolitical infrastructure of late twentieth-century capitalism was not only the aircraft carrier or factory, but the balance sheet synchronized across terminals and databases.
The Soviet Union entered this system as a borrower rather than a monetary issuer. That asymmetry proved decisive. The United States and its allied banking networks controlled the dominant liquidity infrastructure of the global economy. Soviet indebtedness subjected the USSR to the recursive calculations of a planetary spreadsheet system whose rules it neither designed nor controlled.
In this sense, the breakup of the Soviet Union can be interpreted as a crisis of informational-financial integration. The USSR became trapped inside a dollar-based computational order that transformed debt, interest rates, and liquidity into instruments of geopolitical coordination.
Conclusion
The Soviet Union helped create the Eurodollar market as a defensive maneuver against American financial power. Yet over time it became dependent on the offshore dollar system for liquidity, modernization, and hard-currency financing.
This dependence proved fatal once the Volcker shock, oil-price collapse, and tightening global credit conditions exposed the Soviet economy to recursive financial pressures it could neither model nor control.
From a SACT perspective, the USSR collapsed because it could not successfully transition from industrial-era planning to informational-financial coordination. The Cold War was therefore not only a geopolitical conflict. It was also a competition between two computational systems centralized industrial bureaucracy versus networked spreadsheet capitalism.
The decisive infrastructure of late twentieth-century capitalism was not merely the factory or the aircraft carrier. It was the globally synchronized balance sheet operating across terminals, databases, telecommunications systems, and offshore dollar markets.
The Soviet Union entered that system as a borrower rather than as the issuer of its dominant liquidity instrument. That asymmetry changed history.
References and Citations
[1] Einzig, P. (1988). The Euro-Dollar Market. Palgrave Macmillan. (Detailing the foundational role of the Moscow Narodny Bank and BCEN “Eurobank” in inventing offshore dollar deposits).
[2] Schenk, C. R. (1998). The Origins of the Eurodollar Market in London: 1955–1963. Explorations in Economic History, 35(2), 221-238.
[3] Marichal, C. (1989). A Century of Debt Crises in Latin America: From Independence to the Great Depression, 1980-1989. Princeton University Press. (Contextualizing petrodollar recycling and the broader 1980s global sovereign debt dynamics).
[4] Wriston, W. B. (1992). The Twilight of Sovereignty: How the Information Revolution is Transforming Our World. Scribner. (On the rise of the electronic “information standard” and banking credit creation).
[5] Kotkin, S. (2001). Armageddon Averted: The Soviet Collapse, 1970-2000. Oxford University Press. (Documenting Soviet hard-currency indebtedness, Siberian oil investments, and technology imports).
[6] Morgan, D. (1979). Merchants of Grain. Viking Press. (Detailing the structural Soviet dependence on Western agricultural imports and the “Great Grain Robbery”).
[7] Volcker, P. A., & Gyohten, T. (1992). Changing Fortunes: The World’s Money and the Threat to American Leadership. Times Books. (On the domestic and international macroeconomic consequences of the 1979 interest rate shock).
[8] Yergin, D. (1991). The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, and Power. Simon & Schuster. (Detailing the mid-1980s oil price collapse and its impact on petro-states).
[9] Gaidar, Y. (2007). Collapse of an Empire: Lessons for Modern Russia. Brookings Institution Press. (The definitive economic history of the Soviet collapse, linking it directly to the balance-of-payments crisis, grain dependence, and the oil shock).
[10] MacKenzie, D. (2006). An Engine, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets. MIT Press. (Analyzing how financial models and computer terminals actively construct modern capitalist rationality).
[11] Nove, A. (1992). An Economic History of the USSR: 1917-1991. Penguin Books. (Detailing the structural information latencies inherent to Gosplan and central command planning).
[12] Campbell-Kelly, M. (2007). Number Crunching: A History of Commercial Computing. Sloan Management Review. (Tracing the history of the personal computer spreadsheet as a corporate planning tool).
[13] Sachs, J. (1993). Poland’s Jump to the Market Economy. MIT Press. (On the implementation and structural consequences of macroeconomic “shock therapy” in former command economies).
References
Arrighi, G. (1994). The Long Twentieth Century: Money, Power, and the Origins of our Times. Verso.
Engelen, E., Erturk, I., Froud, J., Johal, S., Leaver, A., Moran, M., Nilsson, A., & Williams, K. (2011). After the great complacence: Financial crisis and the politics of reform. Oxford University Press.
Fields, D., & Vernengo, M. (2013). Hegemonic currencies during the crisis: The dollar versus the euro in a Cartalist perspective. Review of International Political Economy, 20(4), 740–759.
Gowan, P. (1999). The Global Gamble: Washington’s Faustian bid for World Dominance. Verso.
Harvey, D. (2005). A Brief History of Neoliberalism. Oxford University Press.
Helleiner, E. (1994). States and the Reemergence of Global Finance. Cornell University Press.
Kurtzman, J. (1993). The Death of Money. Simon & Schuster.
Lipton, D., & Sachs, J. (1990). Creating a Market Economy in Eastern Europe: The Case of Poland. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 1990(1), 75–147.
Naylor, R. T. (2004). Hot Money and the Politics of Debt. McGill-Queen’s University Press.
Sachs, J. (1994). Poland’s Jump to the Market Economy. MIT Press.
Simondon, G. (2017). On the Mode of Existence of Technical Objects (C. Malaspina & J. Rogove, Trans.). Univocal Publishing. (Original work published 1958)
Tooze, A. (2018). Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World. Viking.
Volcker, P., & Gyohten, T. (1992). Changing Fortunes: The World’s Money and the Threat to American Leadership. Times Books.
Wriston, W. B. (1992). The Twilight of Sovereignty: How the Information Revolution is Transforming our World. Scribner.
Notes
[1] the USSR played a deeply ironic role in the birth of the Eurodollar market, the very offshore dollar system that later helped discipline and ultimately contributed to the collapse of the Soviet command economy. What began as a defensive Cold War maneuver to protect dollar holdings from U.S. seizure became the seedbed of the unregulated, floating-rate dollar market that Walter Wriston would later weaponize for petrodollar recycling and the Third World Debt Crisis. The Soviets inadvertently helped create the indexical infrastructure that would later turn against them.
The formation role (1956–1957): defensive substitution creates the first offshore dollar market.
After the 1956 Hungarian Revolution and the Suez Crisis, the Soviet Union feared that its dollar deposits held directly in U.S. banks could be frozen or confiscated as a geopolitical sanction. In response, the USSR moved those dollars to its own controlled banks in Europe. The key vehicle was the Moscow Narodny Bank (MNB) in London—a British-registered but Soviet-owned institution—and the Banque Commerciale pour l’Europe du Nord (BCEN, nicknamed “Eurobank”) in Paris. On 28 February 1957, MNB transferred $800,000 from US banks to a London merchant bank, creating what is widely regarded as the first significant Eurodollar deposit and loan. Because the dollars were now legally held by a European bank, they sat outside U.S. jurisdiction and Regulation Q interest-rate ceilings. These Soviet banks began lending the offshore dollars to other borrowers, giving birth to the Eurodollar market—the unregulated pool of U.S. dollars held and traded outside the United States. The very name “Eurodollar” derives from the telex address “Eurobank” used by the Paris Soviet bank. This was pure Substitution in action: the tangible risk of sovereign seizure was replaced by a new, indexical offshore dollar sign that pointed to liquidity without resembling any national vault.
The borrowing phase (1970s) saw Eurodollars fund oil and development projects. By the 1970s the Eurodollar market had matured into the planet’s largest unregulated money pool. The USSR and its Eastern European satellites became major borrowers within it. Facing chronic hard-currency shortages, the Soviets drew on syndicated floating-rate Eurodollar loans to finance three strategic needs:
Soviet hard-currency debt ballooned from roughly $5 billion in 1974 to $14–17 billion by the end of 1976 and continued climbing. Much of this was short-term, floating-rate Eurodollar debt priced off LIBOR—exactly the indexical instruments that Wriston’s banks were aggressively syndicating with petrodollar surpluses. The stack’s Telecom Synchronization layer made these loans instantaneous and borderless; Symbolic Computing tabulated Soviet oil revenues and debt-service projections in Western bank spreadsheets; Abstraction turned Soviet infrastructure projects into relational balance-sheet cells whose value was determined solely by future dollar cash flows.
In SACT terms, the USSR’s early role in creating the Eurodollar market supplied the very infrastructure that later enabled the petrodollar recycling that fueled the Latin American Debt Crisis. The same floating-rate, offshore dollar system the Soviets helped birth in 1957 became the mechanism that lent them the dollars they needed in the 1970s—only for Volcker’s rate hikes and the 1985–86 oil-price collapse to make that debt unsustainable. The master spreadsheet that the Soviets inadvertently helped globalize ultimately recalibrated their own future out of existence. The investigation shows the recursive power of Index Capitalism: even a superpower that helped create the stack could not escape its indexical discipline once the global spreadsheet reformulated the terms.
[2]
Prompt(s) Make the case that SACT was important to the breakup of the USSR due to the global dynamics of spreadsheet logic and was important to the privatization of USSR industries.
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Not to be considered financial advice. AI is often used, and results are thoroughly interrogated. Links are used for some citations.
Anthony J. Pennings, PhD is a Professor at the Department of Technology and Society, State University of New York, Korea and a Research Professor for Stony Brook University. He teaches AI and broadband policy. From 2002-2012 he taught digital economics and information systems management at New York University. He also taught in the Digital Media MBA at St. Edwards University in Austin, Texas, where he lives when not in Korea.
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Tags: eurodollars > Gosplan > petrodollars > Third World Debt Crisis
Petrodollars, Shock Therapy, and the Emergence of Global Spreadsheet Logic
Posted on | May 16, 2026 | No Comments
Citation APA (7th Edition)
Pennings, A.J. (2026, May 16) Petrodollars, Shock Therapy, and the Emergence of Global Spreadsheet Logic. apennings.com https://apennings.com/global-e-commerce/petrodollars-shock-therapy-and-the-emergence-of-global-spreadsheet-logic/
Introduction
The debt crises of the 1980s are usually explained through the language of oil shocks, inflation, petrodollar recycling, and the harsh monetary tightening of the Federal Reserve under Paul Volcker. [1] But beneath these familiar historical narratives lay a deeper transformation that is often overlooked. The crises were not merely economic or geopolitical. They were computational.
The 1980s marked the emergence of what might be called global spreadsheet capitalism. A new monetary order emerged through digital balance sheets, recursive interest-rate calculations, offshore dollar creation, and increasingly synchronized financial telecommunications networks. This was the moment when the global political economy became governable through spreadsheet logic.
Substitution, Abstraction, Computation, and Telecom synchronization (SACT), otherwise known as spreadsheet logic can be used to analyze the 1980s debt crisis and its aftereffects. These events represented the first planetary-scale integration of financial markets through digital symbolic systems. The rise of personal computers and applications such as VisiCalc and Lotus 1-2-3 fundamentally changed how banks, corporations, governments, and international financial institutions understood and managed money.
The modern USD system became increasingly mediated through spreadsheet interfaces connected by high-speed telecommunications infrastructure. The fusion of domestic dollars, Eurodollars, and petrodollars transformed the post-Bretton Woods gold-dollar standard into an information-interest rate standard, with microprocessing compute as its determining factor.
The Petrodollar System and the Rise of Offshore Dollar Liquidity
The story begins with the collapse of the Bretton Woods system in 1971. Once the United States suspended gold convertibility, the dollar required a new mechanism to elevate global demand. That mechanism emerged through oil and a re-energized Eurodollar lending system.
Following the 1973 oil embargo imposed by Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), oil prices quadrupled. Oil-exporting states accumulated enormous dollar surpluses, especially Saudi Arabia and the Gulf monarchies. These “petrodollars” were deposited into major Western banks, particularly in London’s offshore Eurodollar markets.
The Eurodollar market rapidly expanded into a massive global liquidity machine. Banks now possessed enormous pools of offshore dollars from OPEC that needed borrowers. Developing countries across Latin America, Africa, and Asia became the primary recipients of this recycled liquidity.
At first, the system appeared stable. Inflation was high, real interest rates were low, and commodity-exporting nations expected future export revenues to cover their obligations. But a deeper transformation was underway. International lending was becoming digitized, modeled, and recursively managed through spreadsheet systems.
The Spreadsheet Revolution
The rise of the personal computer during the late 1970s and early 1980s transformed finance in ways comparable to the mechanization of industry during the nineteenth century.
Before spreadsheets, debt analysis and financial forecasting were labor-intensive processes. Calculations required teams of analysts working with paper ledgers, calculators, and centralized mainframe systems. Financial modeling was slow, fragmented, and difficult to update dynamically.
VisiCalc changed that. Released in 1979 for the Apple II, VisiCalc was the first widely adopted spreadsheet application. It allowed users to create dynamic financial models where changes in one variable automatically recalculated entire tables of data. This capability was revolutionary for banking, accounting, and finance.
Lotus 1-2-3, introduced in 1983 for the IBM PC, accelerated the transformation even further by integrating spreadsheet calculation,
database functionality, and graphical visualization into a single software platform running on IBM-compatible PCs.
The spreadsheet became more than an accounting tool. It became a new way of seeing, computing, and governing economic reality.
SACT and the Rise of Spreadsheet Capitalism
The rise of spreadsheet capitalism can be understood through the four layers of the SACT framework.
Substitution
The first layer involved converting heterogeneous economic activity into standardized dollar-denominated obligations. Infrastructure projects in Brazil, oil imports in Mexico, or industrialization programs in Argentina were increasingly financed through offshore dollar loans. Local developmental futures became translated into repayment schedules, discounted cash flows, and sovereign debt obligations.
Spreadsheet applications allowed banks to model these obligations rapidly and continuously. The future itself became computationally tradable.
Abstraction
Spreadsheets also transformed countries into symbolic balance sheets.
Entire political economies became represented through debt-to-GDP ratios, reserve levels, inflation rates, export projections, and interest-rate spreads.
This abstraction process compressed complex societies into numerical representations that could circulate globally through banks, credit-rating agencies, and institutions such as the International Monetary Fund. Economic governance increasingly became spreadsheet governance.
Computation
The decisive moment arrived with the Volcker Shock. Beginning in 1979, the Federal Reserve led by Paul Volcker sharply increased US interest rates to combat domestic inflation. Facing double-digit inflation in the United States, Volcker sharply increased interest rates, driving the federal funds rate above 20 percent by 1981. In spreadsheet terms, the denominator of the global financial system suddenly changed.
The recursive logic of discounted cash-flow finance can be shown as:
As the interest rate r rises, the present value of future income falls, debt-servicing costs rise, and refinancing becomes increasingly difficult.
Spreadsheet software automated these recalculations globally. What once required weeks of accounting could now be recomputed instantly on PCs inside New York banks, IMF offices, corporate treasury departments, and finance ministries throughout the developing world.
The result was catastrophic for heavily indebted countries. Dollar debts tied to floating interest rates suddenly became unpayable. The Latin American debt crisis erupted in 1982 when Mexico announced it could no longer service its obligations. Similar crises spread rapidly throughout the Global South.
Telecom Synchronization
The fourth layer connected these spreadsheet systems into a synchronized global network. By the 1980s satellite communications,
SWIFT messaging, Reuters terminals, Fedwire, and emerging electronic trading systems allowed financial information to circulate globally in near real time.
Later, terminals developed by Bloomberg L.P. would deepen this synchronization by integrating live market data, spreadsheets, analytics, messaging, and bond pricing into a unified computational environment. The world economy increasingly operated as a distributed but synchronized spreadsheet.
Under the gold standard, monetary discipline emerged through material constraints on gold reserves. Under spreadsheet capitalism, discipline emerged through interest-rate calculations, collateral valuations, liquidity models, and continuously updated debt metrics.
Walter Wriston famously called this transformation the “information standard.” But a more precise term may be the spreadsheet standard, with an emphasize on the calcuation of interest rates and a recursive logic that immediately transformed the global balance sheet.[2] In spreadsheet terms, every sovereign debt model recalculated simultaneously:
Debt Service = Principal + (r × Debt)
As the interest rate r increased several things occurred simulataneously. Around the world, debt servicing costs exploded, capital fled toward higher-yielding US assets, commodity prices weakened, and local currencies depreciated sharply. Countries suddenly needed far more local currency to acquire the dollars necessary to service external debts. This triggered a vicious recursive cycle.
Shock Therapy as Spreadsheet Enforcement
The policy response to the debt crisis became known as “shock therapy.” Countries seeking IMF assistance were required to implement new austerity programs, privatization of government assets (especially PTTs needed for SACT), trade liberalization, high interest rates, and stronger fiscal discipline.
In narrow monetary terms, these policies often succeeded in reducing inflation. Economists such as Jeffrey Sachs became internationally known for helping stabilize hyperinflation in countries like Bolivia and later post-socialist economies in Eastern Europe.[3]
But the social costs were enormous. Industrial sectors collapsed. Real wages fell. Public services deteriorated. Much of Latin America experienced what became known as the “Lost Decade.”
From a SACT perspective, shock therapy represented the forcible synchronization of peripheral economies with the recursive logic of global spreadsheet capitalism. Countries were required to reorganize themselves according to the metrics displayed on financial terminals in New York, London, and Washington. The spreadsheet became a disciplinary machine.
From Spreadsheet Capitalism to SACT-AI
The importance of VisiCalc and Lotus 1-2-3 therefore extends far beyond office software history. These applications formed the computational foundation of financial globalization itself.
They enabled scalable sovereign debt modeling, recursive interest-rate simulations, securitization, collateral optimization, and transnational liquidity management. Without spreadsheets, the explosive growth of Eurodollar finance during the 1980s would have been impossible.
Today, however, the system is transforming again. The static spreadsheet models of the 1980s are being replaced by AI-driven financial systems capable of autonomous forecasting, real-time optimization, multi-agent simulations, and continuous balance-sheet recalculation.
This is the transition toward SACT-AI. If spreadsheet capitalism represented the digitization of global finance, SACT-AI represents its autonomization. In this emerging system:
– AI models continuously rebalance liquidity,
– blockchain systems synchronize settlement,
– hyperscale data centers process planetary-scale financial flows,
and
– digital currencies potentially enable real-time multilateral clearing.
This is why Keynes’s original Bancor and International Clearing Union proposal may only now become technically feasible. Bretton Woods lacked the computational infrastructure necessary for real-time multilateral coordination.
SACT-AI supplies the missing substrate. The word substrate here means the underlying technical, computational, and institutional base that allows a system to function coherently at scale. Previous systems did not have the complete or sufficient substrates. Bretton Woods relied on punch cards, telegraphs, and batch accounting. The Eurodollar system relied on spreadsheets, terminals, and telex/packet-switched networks. Contemporary finance relies on distributed cloud computing, APIs, AI models, and blockchain synchronization.
This is why Keynes’s original Bancor and International Clearing Union proposal may only now become technically feasible. Bretton Woods lacked the computational infrastructure required for real-time multilateral clearing and dynamic liquidity management.
The 1980s debt crisis was therefore not simply the failure of development economics. It was the birth of global spreadsheet capitalism, a system whose logic continues to structure the world economy today, and whose next phase may culminate in AI-mediated planetary monetary coordination.
References
Boz, E., Casas, C., Georgiadis, G., Gopinath, G., Le Mezo, H., Mehl, A., & Nguyen, T. (2022). Patterns of Invoicing Currency in Global Trade. Journal of International Economics, 136, 103604.
Eichengreen, B. (2008). Globalizing Capital: A History of the International Monetary System (2nd ed.). Princeton University Press.
Harvey, D. (2005). A Brief History of Neoliberalism. Oxford University Press.
Helleiner, E. (1994). States and the Reemergence of Global Finance. Cornell University Press.
Kurtzman, J. (1993). The Death of Money. Simon & Schuster.
Sachs, J. (1985). The Bolivian hyperinflation and stabilization. American Economic Review, 76(2), 279–283.
Moffit, M. The World’s Money: International Banking from Bretton Woods to the Brink of Insolvency. Touchstone Books 1984-06-22
Steil, B. (2013). The Battle of Bretton Woods: John Maynard Keynes, Harry Dexter White, and the Making of a New World Order. Princeton University Press.
Strange, S. (1986). Casino Capitalism. Basil Blackwell.
Triffin, R. (1960). Gold and the Dollar Crisis: The Future of Convertibility. Yale University Press.
Volcker, P., & Gyohten, T. (1992). Changing Fortunes: The World’s Money and the Threat to American Leadership. Times Books.
Wriston, W. B. (1992). The Twilight of Sovereignty: How the Information Revolution is Transforming our World. Scribner.
Notes
[1] My own MA thesis Deregulation and the Telecommunications Structure of Transnationally Integrated Financial Industries (1986) followed this line of inquiry. But my main interest was how technologies were being shaped by these trends. Michael Moffitt’s The World’s Money was extremely useful in supplying the background on the Eurodollar emergence and its role in the debt crisis of the 1980s.
[2] I liked Walter Wriston’s notion of the “Information Standard” because it had dispensed with gold, but found it analytically weak in many regards as I laid out in my PhD dissertation in a chapter on “The Information Standard and other Sovereignties.”
[3] Sachs, J. (1985). The Bolivian Hyperinflation and Stabilization. Earth Institute. As Sachs work on Bolvia shows, economists were very hesitant to address the technological changes going on in the global economy and financial world.
Prompt(s) What how effective was “shock therapy” for countries that had gone into petrodollar debt in the 1970s and experienced hyperinflation in the 1980s. Discuss the OPEC oil price rises, and the recycling of eurodollars and what was the role of PC-enabled spreadsheets.
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Not to be considered financial advice. AI is often used, and results are thoroughly interrogated. Links are used for some citations.
Anthony J. Pennings, PhD is a Professor at the Department of Technology and Society, State University of New York, Korea and a Research Professor for Stony Brook University. He teaches AI and broadband policy. From 2002-2012 he taught digital economics and information systems management at New York University. He also taught in the Digital Media MBA at St. Edwards University in Austin, Texas, where he lives when not in Korea.
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Tags: 1973 oil shock > eurodollars > Information Standard > interest rate standard > Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet > petrodollars > shock therapy > VisiCalc > Walter Wriston
When the Fed Speaks, Global Spreadsheets Reformulate the Future
Posted on | May 8, 2026 | No Comments
Citation APA (7th Edition)
Pennings, A.J. (2026, May 08) When the Fed Speaks, Global Spreadsheets Reformulate the Future. apennings.com https://apennings.com/meaning-makers/when-the-fed-speaks-global-spreadsheets-reformulate/
Introduction
Every eight weeks, the Federal Reserve (Fed) announces whether it will change or maintain the current interest rates. It usually becomes a major item in mainstream news, but has an even greater impact on financial news. Financial traders in particular are glued to the news to hear about the latest Fed policy announcement. What’s the big deal? In the post below, I explain why the world tunes in so intently to the Fed’s decision and how the news ripples out and influences economies worldwide.
My economics class recently conducted the Federal Reserve’s FOMC Simulation, which I developed at New York University some 20 years ago.[1] Students become Fed Presidents, research their geographic economies, and participate in the “Go Rounds” discussing their districts and ultimately prescribing and voting on Fed policy. Then we compare with the actual FOMC meeting results a few days later. This year, the class matched the FOMC’s target of no change, but below, I develop a scenario of what happens when they target an interest rate reduction for illustrative purposes.[2]
When the Federal Open Market Committee announces a 50-basis-point rate cut, the event appears at first glance to be a simple policy adjustment. It sends the prescription to the Open Market Operations (OMO) at the New York Fed to reduce the federal funds target range by 0.5 percentage points. Traders work with some 20 primary banks to buy their US securities and inject money into the economy.[3]
But within the global architecture of spreadsheet capitalism, this is not merely a policy signal. It is a recursive recalculation event propagating through an interconnected planetary spreadsheet composed of terminals, databases, algorithms, collateral chains, and AI-driven trading systems. Modern spreadsheets do not merely store information; they automatically recompute relationships when variables change. Interest-rate changes by the Federal Reserve System immediately cascade through financial and commodity pricing models worldwide.
The modern world economy operates as a synchronized symbolic computation system. A rate cut, therefore, triggers not a single reaction but billions of linked recalculations occurring simultaneously across financial terminals such as the Bloomberg Terminal, BlackRock’s Aladdin, LSEG’s Workspace, and the Wind Information Terminal. The moment the announcement appears, spreadsheet logic activates globally.
The Spreadsheet Cell Changes
At 2:00 PM Eastern Time, the FOMC statement hits the terminals. On Bloomberg screens, the federal funds rate cell updates, Treasury yield curves immediately reprice, futures contracts recalculate implied forward rates, volatility indexes spike, swap spreads adjust, and algorithmic trading systems parse every word of the Fed statement within milliseconds for anxous traders.
The key point is that modern finance is formula-driven. Financial terminals are giant recursive spreadsheets where cells depend on other cells. A single policy variable change such as a .50% change propagates through millions of formulas globally.
Treasury Markets Recalculate
The first major recalculation occurs in the US Treasury market. Because Treasury yields represent the “risk-free rate” underlying global asset pricing, every maturity on the yield curve begins moving. Two-year Treasury yields fall sharply because they closely track expected Fed policy. Ten-year and thirty-year yields may decline if recession fears dominate, or rise if markets anticipate future inflation.
Immediately, bond prices rise, duration-sensitive portfolios gain value, repo collateral valuations improve, and leveraged funds experience changes in margin capacity. On Aladdin systems used by large asset managers, portfolio risk metrics recompute automatically. Value-at-Risk (VaR), duration exposure, convexity, liquidity stress tests, and collateral utilization ratios change in a millisecond. Billions in balance-sheet capacity suddenly appear or disappear depending on positioning.
The Dollar Weakens—Then Liquidity Expands
Currency terminals react next. Lower interest rates reduce the yield advantage of dollar assets. Foreign exchange algorithms immediately begin repricing USD/JPY, EUR/USD, USD/CNY, and emerging-market carry trades. The dollar often weakens initially because lower rates reduce returns on dollar-denominated assets.
But the deeper effect concerns global dollar liquidity. Because the USD system includes both domestic dollars and offshore Eurodollars, lower US rates reduce global refinancing costs. Eurodollar banks in London, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Dubai recalculate funding costs across billions of liabilities.
Spreadsheet models governing FX swaps, offshore repo markets,
syndicated loans, trade finance, and derivatives pricing all update simultaneously. Liquidity expands recursively because cheaper funding lowers the cost of leverage.
Equity Markets Enter Risk-On Mode
When equity markets “enter risk-on mode” after a decline in interest rates, the shift is not merely psychological, it is computational. Across the global financial system, spreadsheet formulas embedded in valuation models, trading terminals, portfolio algorithms, and AI risk engines begin recursively recalculating the future. The system becomes “risk-on” because the global spreadsheet is recursively repricing uncertainty downward.
At the center of this process lies the discounted cash flow (DCF) equation where:
PV = present value of an asset
CF = expected future cash flow
r = discount rate (interest rate + risk premium)
n = time horizon
When central banks reduce interest rates, or when markets anticipate easier monetary conditions, the denominator declines. Even small reductions in r can produce large increases in present value, especially for assets whose expected profits lie far in the future.
Equity terminals respond almost instantly. Growth stocks surge first. AI companies, cloud computing firms, semiconductors, speculative tech start to rise. On Bloomberg and LSEG terminals price/earnings ratios expand, earnings models recompute, sector rotation dashboards update, volatility forecasts adjust. Passive investment systems and ETFs rebalance automatically.
The spreadsheet logic of index capitalism intensifies the move. Rising prices attract inflows of capital, inflows force additional purchases,
purchases further raise prices. The spreadsheet becomes reflexive.
At a deeper philosophical level, falling discount rates alter society’s relationship to time itself. Higher rates compress the future because distant possibilities are discounted heavily. Lower rates expand the future because imagined possibilities become financially valuable in the present. The spreadsheet begins monetizing expectations farther and farther into the future.
This is why speculative periods produce technological booms, infrastructure expansion, venture capital surges, and waves of financial experimentation.
Emerging Markets Experience Liquidity Relief
In Tier 4 and Tier 5 economies, the consequences are dramatic. Countries dependent on dollar funding suddenly face lower refinancing costs, stronger capital inflows, and reduced debt-service pressures.
Emerging-market sovereign bond spreads tighten. Commodity-exporting nations experience currency stabilization. Local banks gain improved access to offshore dollar liquidity. On Wind terminals in China and financial dashboards across the Global South, sovereign spreads narrow, capital flight pressures ease, and infrastructure financing becomes cheaper, making AI4Good and ICT4D projects more feasible.
This is critical because much of the world borrows in dollars while earning revenues in local currencies. Lower Fed rates reduce the pressure of the global dollar hierarchy.
Commodity Markets Reprice
Commodity terminals react next. Commodities such as oil, copper, lithium, food, and gold often rise when the dollar weakens. Energy and industrial input forecasts update globally.
AI trading systems recalculate inflation expectations, shipping demand, industrial production probabilities, and supply-chain forecasts. Under SACT-AI, that process becomes globally synchronized, recursively optimized, and continuously recalculated across interconnected monetary networks.
On Bloomberg commodity dashboards, futures curves shift, inventory projections change, and volatility surfaces adjust. Oil-exporting states experience rising revenues. Import-dependent economies experience relief or, at times, renewed inflation depending on exchange-rate dynamics.
Stablecoins and Digital Dollar Liquidity Expand
In the emerging stablecoin infosystem, Treasury-backed digital dollars react almost immediately. Stablecoin issuers holding short-term T-bills see declining yields on reserves, but rising demand for tokenized liquidity.
As borrowing costs fall, crypto leverage expands. Decentralized finance protocols increase activity, and tokenized Treasury products gain volume. Blockchain systems effectively become extensions of the dollar liquidity network. Spreadsheet capitalism merges with programmable finance.
This change is critical because much of the world borrows in dollars while earning revenues in local currencies. Lower Fed rates reduce the pressure on the global dollar hierarchy.
AI Systems Begin Recursive Forecasting
The most advanced systems do not merely react; they simulate second-order consequences. AI engines embedded within Aladdin, sovereign wealth funds, hedge funds, central banks, and macroeconomic forecasting systems begin generating probabilistic future scenarios.
These models ask:
Will lower rates trigger inflation?
Will capital flow back into China?
Will emerging-market defaults decline?
Will housing markets reignite?
Will energy demand accelerate?
The world economy becomes recursively anticipatory. The spreadsheet logic no longer merely records reality; it predicts and reshapes it simultaneously.
Governments also recalculate. The US Treasury projects lower debt-servicing costs and increased fiscal flexibility. China evaluates the capital-flow implications, renminbi stability, and adjustments to reserve management. European policymakers reconsider ECB policy divergence, sovereign debt dynamics, and banking-sector stability. The spreadsheet logic extends into geopolitics itself.
Recursive Spreadsheet Logic
What appears publicly as a “50-basis-point cut” is actually a planetary recomputation event. Every major financial terminal functions as a node in a distributed spreadsheet, a synchronized balance-sheet engine, and an anticipatory modeling system.
The modern monetary order operates through recursive symbolic computation. Treasury yields influence repo collateral, repo collateral influences leverage, leverage influences asset prices,
asset prices influence capital flows, capital flows influence exchange rates, exchange rates influence trade balances, trade balances influence geopolitical power.
The spreadsheet recalculates the world continuously.
This is why the Federal Reserve possesses extraordinary global influence. The Fed does not merely set US borrowing costs. It alters the primary variables governing the world’s computational liquidity architecture.
Under SACT logic:
Substitution denominates activity and material in dollars,
Abstraction converts economies into symbolic balance sheets,
Computation recursively recalculates them,
Telecommunications synchronize the process globally.
A 50-basis-point cut therefore becomes not a national policy event,
but a global spreadsheet shock propagating through the entire planetary monetary assemblage.
In the emerging SACT-AI world, this process becomes even more autonomous. AI systems increasingly monitor and rebalance liquidity, collateral, energy systems, supply chains, and sovereign risks in real time.
The future global economy may thus operate less like a market and more like a continuously recomputing planetary coordination engine.
Notes
[1] I designed the simulation to help students appreciate Macroeconomics, but I have used it in MBA and engineering economics classes as well.
[2] I wrote my MA thesis on the deregulation of finance and the privatization of telecommunications in the mid-1980s. One of the processes I was tracking was the the emergence of Eurodollars and its relationship to national debt and the sales of national telecommunications.
[3] See Pennings, A.J.(2015) The FedWatcher’s Handbook. Createspace.
Prompt(s) Produce a scenario where the Fed’s FOMC reduces interest rates by 50 basis points. What happens recursively around the world on the spreadsheet displays of financial terminals such as Bloomberg’s, Blackrock’s, LSEG’s, and Wind”s?
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Not to be considered financial advice. AI is often used, and results are thoroughly interrogated. Links are used for some citations.
Anthony J. Pennings, PhD is a Professor at the Department of Technology and Society, State University of New York, Korea and a Research Professor for Stony Brook University. He teaches AI and broadband policy. From 2002-2012 he taught digital economics and information systems management at New York University. He also taught in the Digital Media MBA at St. Edwards University in Austin, Texas, where he lives when not in Korea.
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Tags: BlackRock Alladin > Bloombery Box > Fed Funds Rate > FOMC
Stablecoins, SACT-AI, and the Future of Global Liquidity for Sustainable Development
Posted on | April 28, 2026 | No Comments
Citation APA (7th Edition)
Pennings, A.J. (2026, Apr 28) Stablecoins, SACT-AI, and the Future of Global Liquidity for Sustainable Development. apennings.com https://apennings.com/political-economy-of-media/stablecoins-sact-ai-and-the-future-of-global-liquidity-for-sustainable-development/
Introduction
The impending implementation of Treasury-backed stablecoins suggests a the onset of a profound shift in the architecture of global finance. What appears, at first glance, to be a technical innovation in digital payments is better understood as a structural revolution in how USD liquidity is created, distributed, and governed.
This post analyzes the transition of US Treasury-backed stablecoins from a technical payment innovation to a structural revolution in global liquidity. By tokenizing the “pristine collateral” of US government debt, stablecoins are set to create “retail-level Eurodollars,” enabling individuals worldwide to bypass traditional, hierarchical banking channels, including those in Tiers 4 and 5.
When placed within a broader SACT-AI Bancor/International Clearing Union (ICU) framework, stablecoins cease to be mere crypto instruments and become a bridge between today’s dollar system and a future multipolar monetary order.
At their core, stablecoins backed by short-term US Treasury bills transform government debt into circulating digital money. This development extends a longer historical trajectory in which US Treasuries have evolved from simple financing tools into the foundational collateral of global finance.[1] In repo markets, shadow banking systems, and Eurodollar lending networks, Treasuries already function as the primary instruments through which liquidity is secured and expanded. Stablecoins take the next step: they convert that collateral into tokenized, programmable liquidity that can move instantly across borders.
This transformation matters most when understood through the lens of what might be called the SACT stack: substitution, abstraction, computation, and telecommunications. Stablecoins operate across all four layers simultaneously. They substitute for bank deposits in transactions, abstract Treasury securities into digital tokens, rely on computational systems to maintain parity and trust, and move across global telecom networks with minimal latency. In doing so, they compress the traditional hierarchy of dollar access that has long defined the global political economy.
Historically, access to dollar liquidity, especially for countries in what might be termed Tier 4 and Tier 5 of the global system, has been mediated through complex and often exclusionary channels.
Correspondent banking, offshore Eurodollar markets, multilateral institutions, and volatile capital flows have subjected USD liquidity to multiple constraints. These mechanisms are not only costly but also deeply hierarchical, privileging actors closest to the core of dollar creation.[2]
Stablecoins disrupt this structure by enabling what could be described as retail-level Eurodollars. Individuals and firms no longer need to rely on banks to access dollar-denominated liquidity; instead, they can hold and transfer tokenized dollars directly through digital wallets.
Yet this apparent democratization of access carries an inherent contradiction. Without a coordinating framework, stablecoins risk intensifying what economists describe as dollar dominance or even “digital dollarization.” As users in emerging and developing economies shift toward stablecoin USD for transactions and savings, local currencies may weaken, reducing the effectiveness of domestic monetary policy and increasing dependence on US financial conditions (Rey, 2015). In this sense, stablecoins could deepen the very asymmetries they appear to alleviate.
This is precisely where the SACT-AI Bancor/ICU system becomes essential. Originally proposed by John Maynard Keynes at Bretton Woods, the International Clearing Union envisioned a world in which trade imbalances would be managed symmetrically through a supranational unit of account, the Bancor, rather than through reliance on a single national currency.[3] The failure to implement this system led instead to the dollar-centric order, with all its well-known tensions, including the Triffin dilemma and recurring global liquidity cycles.[4]
What Keynes lacked, however, was the technological infrastructure to make such a system operational. Today, SACT-AI provides that missing layer. By combining real-time data processing, machine learning, and global telecommunications networks, it becomes possible to continuously monitor trade flows, capital movements, energy constraints, and climate risks. Most importantly, it would adjust liquidity conditions accordingly. In this framework, stablecoins do not replace the dollar system but are absorbed into a higher-order coordination mechanism.
Within such a system, stablecoin USD would function primarily as a transactional medium, while the Bancor would serve as the unit of account and clearing reference. SACT-AI would mediate between them, dynamically adjusting exchange relationships, enforcing symmetric penalties on persistent imbalances, and directing liquidity toward productive and sustainable uses. In effect, the system transforms money from a passive store of value into an active instrument of coordination.
For populations in Tier 4 and Tier 5 economies, this shift could be transformative. Stablecoins already offer several immediate benefits, including direct access to dollar liquidity without bank accounts, lower transaction costs for remittances, and a relatively stable store of value in volatile monetary environments. These features alone could significantly expand financial inclusion, particularly in regions where traditional banking infrastructure is limited or unreliable.
However, access to liquidity is not the same as development. What distinguishes the SACT-AI approach is its ability to compute development pathways. By integrating financial flows with real-time data on energy use, agricultural productivity, climate vulnerability, and infrastructure needs, the system can allocate liquidity more intelligently. For example, a rural community investing in solar-powered irrigation or telecommunications infrastructure could receive preferential financing terms, dynamically adjusted through AI models that evaluate long-term sustainability and economic impact.
In this sense, stablecoins become more than digital cash. They become programmable claims on future development, embedded within a system that can continuously recalibrate risk and reward. This marks a departure from traditional financial models, where capital allocation is often driven by short-term returns rather than long-term resilience.
At the same time, the risks cannot be ignored. The speed and liquidity of stablecoin systems create the potential for rapid capital flight and digital bank runs, in which large volumes of funds can be withdrawn or reallocated instantaneously. Because stablecoins are backed by Treasuries, such dynamics could transmit stress directly into the US government bond market, tightening the coupling between global liquidity conditions and US fiscal dynamics.[4] Moreover, the concentration of stablecoin issuance and wallet infrastructure in a small number of private entities raises questions about governance, accountability, and systemic risk.
The SACT-AI ICU framework addresses these challenges by introducing algorithmic governance. Capital flows can be monitored in real time, imbalances can trigger automatic adjustments, and safeguards such as dynamic liquidity buffers or programmable capital controls can be deployed when necessary. Most importantly, the system shifts the focus from simply providing liquidity to governing its distribution and use.
The broader implication is a reconfiguration of the global monetary hierarchy. The United States would retain its advantage as the issuer of the world’s primary collateral asset, US Treasuries, but would no longer exercise unilateral control over global liquidity conditions. Financial centers would evolve into hubs of stablecoin issuance and AI coordination, while surplus economies would gain alternatives to recycling capital exclusively into dollar assets. Most significantly, peripheral economies would gain not just access to liquidity, but the capacity to scale that access into sustainable development.
Ultimately, the integration of Treasury-backed stablecoins into an SACT-AI Bancor/ICU system represents a convergence of historical trajectories. The expansion of US debt markets provided the collateral base. The rise of global financial networks and platforms transformed markets into real-time computational systems. Stablecoins now extend that logic into the realm of digital money. What SACT-AI adds is the missing layer of coordination—turning a fragmented, hierarchical system into one that can, at least in principle, align liquidity with global development needs.
The outcome is not predetermined. Stablecoins could reinforce existing inequalities, deepening dependence on the dollar and amplifying financial volatility. Or, if embedded within a robust coordination framework, they could become tools for a more balanced and inclusive global economy. The difference lies not in the technology itself, but in how it is governed.
Summary
The blog post analyzes the transition of US Treasury-backed stablecoins from a technical payment innovation to a structural revolution in global liquidity. By tokenizing the “pristine collateral” of government debt, stablecoins create “retail-level Eurodollars,” enabling individuals in peripheral economies to bypass traditional, hierarchical banking channels.
However, the post warns that this “democratization” carries the risk of digital dollarization, where local monetary policies are hollowed out by the dominance of the USD. To mitigate this, the author proposes integrating stablecoins into a SACT-AI Bancor/International Clearing Union (ICU) framework. This system utilizes modern computational power and global telecommunications to finally realize John Maynard Keynes’s 1943 vision for a symmetric, multipolar monetary order.
By using AI to monitor real-time trade, energy, and climate data, the SACT-AI ICU transforms money into an active instrument of coordination, directing liquidity toward programmable development pathways for Tier 4 and Tier 5 economies. The result is a shift from extractive dollar dominance to an algorithmic symmetry that aligns global finance with long-term sustainability and resilience.
References
Eichengreen, B. J. (2011). Exorbitant Privilege: The Rise and Fall of the Dollar and the Future of the International Monetary System. Oxford University Press.
Gorton, G., & Metrick, A. (2012). Securitized banking and the run on repo. Journal of Financial Economics, 104(3), 425–451.
Gorton, G., Lewellen, S., & Metrick, A. (2012). The Safe-Asset Share. American Economic Review Papers & Proceedings, 102(3), 101–106.
Howell, M. J. (2020). Capital Wars: The Rise of Global Liquidity. Palgrave Macmillan.
Keynes, J. M. (1980). The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes: Activities 1940-1944. Shaping the Post-War World: The Clearing Union (Vol. 25). Macmillan. (Original work published 1943).
Mehrling, P. (2011). The New Lombard Street: How the Fed became the Dealer of Last Resort. Princeton University Press.
Pozsar, Z. (2014). Shadow Banking: The Money View. Office of Financial Research Working Paper.
Rey, H. (2015). Dilemma not Trilemma: The Global Financial Cycle and Monetary Policy Independence. NBER Working Paper No. 21162.
Steil, B. (2013). The Battle of Bretton Woods: John Maynard Keynes, Harry Dexter White, and the Making of a New World Order. Princeton University Press.
Triffin, R. (1960). Gold and the Dollar Crisis: The Future of Convertibility. Yale University Press.
Wriston, W. B. (1992). The Twilight of Sovereignty: How the Information Revolution is Transforming our World. Scribner.
Notes
[1] Gorton, G., & Metrick, A. (2012). Securitized banking and the run on repo. Journal of Financial Economics, 104(3), 425–451.
[2] Mehrling, P. (2011). The New Lombard Street: How the Fed became the Dealer of Last Resort. Princeton University Press.
[3] Keynes, J. M. (1980). The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes: Activities 1940-1944. Shaping the Post-War World: The Clearing Union (Vol. 25). Macmillan. (Original work published 1943).
[4] Triffin, R. (1960). Gold and the Dollar Crisis: The Future of Convertibility. Yale University Press.
[5] Gorton, G., & Metrick, A. (2012). Securitized banking and the run on repo. Journal of Financial Economics, 104(3), 425–451. Also see Gorton, G., Lewellen, S., & Metrick, A. (2012). The Safe-Asset Share. American Economic Review Papers & Proceedings, 102(3), 101–106.
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Not to be considered financial advice. AI is often used, and results are thoroughly interrogated. Links are used for some citations.
Anthony J. Pennings, PhD is a Professor at the Department of Technology and Society, State University of New York, Korea and a Research Professor for Stony Brook University. He teaches AI and broadband policy. From 2002-2012 he taught digital economics and information systems management at New York University. He also taught in the Digital Media MBA at St. Edwards University in Austin, Texas, where he lives when not in Korea.
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Tags: Bancor/International Clearing Union (ICU) > John Maynard Keynes > SACT-AI Bancor/ICU > Stablecoins
When Treasuries Went Digital and Built the Global USD System
Posted on | April 26, 2026 | No Comments
Citation APA (7th Edition)
Pennings, A.J. (2026, Apr 26) When Treasuries Went Digital and Built the Global USD System. apennings.com https://apennings.com/digital-geography/when-us-treasuries-went-digital-and-built-the-global-usd-system/
Introduction
The global power of the United States is often explained in geopolitical or military terms. But its foundation lies in something more abstract, and more pervasive: the combined force of the US dollar, plus the Eurodollar (USD) and US Treasury securities.
Together, they form the core infrastructure of global finance. They determine how liquidity circulates, how trade is priced, how risk is managed, and how crises unfold. At the center of this system is not just the USD as a currency, but Treasuries as its programmable financial substrate.
What is less appreciated is that this system did not simply emerge from policy or markets. It was built, step by step, through a technological transformation that turned US government debt from paper certificates into electronic entries in a global network. That transformation, which took place from the 1960s through the 1980s, quietly created the foundation for today’s dollar-dominated world.
The Dollar as a Global Liquidity Service
The USD functions as more than money. It operates as a global liquidity service. It is the primary currency for trade invoicing, financial transactions, and reserve holdings. Central banks accumulate dollars as insurance. Corporations borrow in dollars because it is cheaper and more liquid. Investors flee into USD and Treasuries during crises, reinforcing their status as safe-haven assets.
At the heart of this system sits the US Treasury market, the largest and most liquid government bond market in the world. Treasury securities are used to store value, benchmark interest rates, collateralize financial transactions, and transmit monetary policy.
Their yields influence everything from mortgage rates to corporate borrowing costs. Their availability underpins global credit creation.
But this role depends on one critical feature: liquidity at scale. And that liquidity required a political and technological revolution.
The Problem with Paper
Before the 1960s, U.S. Treasuries existed primarily as physical “bearer bonds.” Ownership was determined by possession. Certificates had to be printed, stored, transported, and manually processed. This system was increasingly incompatible with the growing scale of global finance.
Two problems became acute, operational risk and processing constraints. In 1962, millions of dollars in Treasury securities disappeared from a Federal Reserve Bank. The loss/theft of $7.5 million in bearer bonds, triggered alarms about the risks of physical custody. It became a catalyst for book-entry treasuries, the transition away from physical paper securities toward digital record-keepingto reduced costs and security risks.
At the same time, global finance was expanding. As trading volumes increased, the manual handling of paper securities became slow, expensive, and error-prone. The financial industry sought automation across the board. The Eurodollar market, offshore dollar lending outside US jurisdiction, was growing rapidly. Capital flows were accelerating. The system needed a faster, safer way to manage government debt.
The Shift to Book-Entry Systems
The solution emerged in the form of electronic securities. These were computerized records of ownership maintained on centralized ledgers. In 1968, the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve introduced the first book-entry system. Instead of physical certificates, ownership of Treasuries could now be recorded as entries in a computer system.
Initially, this applied to securities held by banks at the Federal Reserve, securities used as collateral, and securities pledged against government deposits. This was a modest beginning, but it marked a decisive break from the past.
Crisis as Catalyst: The 1970–71 “Insurance Crisis”
A transition accelerated dramatically in the early 1970s.
A crisis in the securities industry, often referred to as the “insurance crisis,” exposed vulnerabilities in the settlement and custody of financial assets. Concerns about liquidity and systemic risk pushed regulators and market participants to expand the book-entry system.
At the same time, the Federal Reserve was upgrading its communications and computing infrastructure. Earlier telegraph and teletype systems were replaced by computer-based networks, culminating in the installation of advanced systems like the Sigma-5 computer at the New York Fed in 1971.
These changes allowed real-time account management, electronic transfer of securities, and integration of clearing and settlement systems. By 1973, the book-entry system had expanded to include securities held by banks on behalf of customers. Within a few years, most marketable Treasury debt had moved into electronic form.
The End of Paper and the Rise of Electronic Markets
At the same time, new clearing and settlement institutions emerged. Systems like FEDWIRE were updated and enabled the electronic transfer of securities between financial institutions, while clearing corporations introduced automated netting and settlement processes.
The transformation continued through the 1970s and early 1980s. By 1980, nearly all marketable Treasuries were held in book-entry form.
In 1982, the Treasury stopped issuing bearer bonds entirely. And in
1986, the Treasury launched TreasuryDirect, extending electronic ownership to retail investors.
The Treasury market itself evolved into a largely “over-the-counter electronic network,” with trading conducted via telephone and early electronic platforms rather than centralized exchanges. What had once been a paper-based system became a digitally synchronized financial network.
Treasuries as Collateral for the Eurodollar System
This digitization had profound consequences. As Treasuries became electronic, they also became more usable as collateral. This was critical for the expansion of the Eurodollar system. In offshore dollar markets, banks create dollar liquidity through lending. These loans require collateral, assets that can be quickly valued, transferred, and liquidated if necessary.
Electronic Treasuries were ideal, as they were highly liquid, easily transferable, and universally accepted. They became the top tier of global collateral, used extensively in repurchase agreements (repos) and other short-term funding markets.
In effect, Treasuries became the operating system of global dollar liquidity. The better the collateral, the cheaper the loan. And nothing was better than a US Treasury.
The Digital Foundation of Dollar Dominance
By the late 1980s, a new system had fully emerged. The USD served as the dominant unit of account and transaction. Treasuries functioned as the primary reserve asset and collateral base. Electronic networks enabled rapid settlement and global synchronization.
This was the infrastructure of what Wriston called the information standard. It allowed capital to move instantly across borders, credit to expand through collateralized lending, and markets to price risk continuously.
But it also created a hierarchy, a tiered system of nations and regions. Those countries closest to the core of USD liquidity, major financial centers, benefited from cheap funding and deep markets. Those further away faced higher costs, greater volatility, and dependence on external capital.
A System Built on Electronic Trust
The digitization of Treasuries did more than improve efficiency. It created a new form of trust. Instead of trusting physical gold or paper certificates, the system relied on electronic records, networked institutions, and continuous verification.
Treasuries became trusted not because they can be held in hand, but because they can be instantly transferred, priced, and collateralized within the global SACT system. This is what makes them “safe.”
Reframing US National Debt
From a traditional macroeconomic perspective, the Reagan era is often debated in terms of growth, inequality (Trickle-down), or fiscal sustainability. But from a global monetary perspective, its deeper significance is that it transformed US government debt into the scalable collateral base of global capitalism.
Without that expansion, Eurodollar markets would have faced collateral shortages, and global credit growth would have constrained the liquidity needed for global trade and debt refinancing. The USD’s dominance might have been weaker or more fragmented. Instead, the world received a system in which US deficits supplied global liquidity, US Treasuries anchored global finance, and the Eurodollar markets amplified USD creation.
Conclusion
The rise of the USD as the world’s dominant currency is often attributed to economic strength, geopolitical power, or institutional design. All of these matter. But beneath them lies a more fundamental reality: The USD system works because it is computable by spreadsheet logic.
The transformation of US Treasuries from paper to electronic form enabled scaling global liquidity, coordinating financial markets, and sustaining the vast network of dollar-based transactions that define today’s world economy.
In this sense, Treasuries are not just debt instruments. They are entries in a global spreadsheet system that records, organizes, and enables the flow of capital across the planet. And as new technologies like AI begin to reshape that spreadsheet, the question is no longer how it works, but how it will transform.
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Not to be considered financial advice. AI is often used, with results thoroughly interrogated. Links are used for some citations to acknowledge sources but also to provide a connection to additional information.
Anthony J. Pennings, PhD is a Professor at the Department of Technology and Society, State University of New York, Korea and a Research Professor for Stony Brook University. He teaches AI and broadband policy. From 2002-2012 he taught digital economics and information systems management at New York University. He also taught in the Digital Media MBA at St. Edwards University in Austin, Texas, where he lives when not in Korea.
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From Gold to Grid and the “Information Standard” to the SACT-AI Engine
Posted on | April 24, 2026 | No Comments
Citation APA (7th Edition)
Pennings, A.J. (2026, Apr 24) From Gold to Grid and the “Information Standard” to the SACT-AI Engine. apennings.com https://apennings.com/dystopian-economies/from-gold-to-grid-the-information-standard-to-the-sact-ai-engine/
Introduction
The transition from the gold-backed stability of Bretton Woods to the volatile, data-driven world of the late 20th century was not merely a shift in policy, it was a shift in logic. That shift continues with the adoption of the SACT-AI engine/platform in the global monetary system.
Walter Wriston’s conception of the Information Standard was a revolutionary pivot in political economy. He argued that the collapse of Bretton Woods did not create a vacuum of order, but rather installed a “new disciplinarian” far more rigorous than gold. It was a collective, real-time judgment of the global digital marketplace. Now we have an opportunity to revisit the Bretton Woods conference and consider the proposal by John Maynard Keynes.[1]
The Information Standard as Global Panopticon
Wriston argued that the gold-backed international currency framework that shaped the global economy after World War II has long been replaced by a new techno-structural system of computerized transactions, news flow, risk management, and technical analysis based on the USD and the collateral strength of US Treasuries.
Wriston viewed the emerging global telecommunications network as a digital panopticon surveilling the world. Unlike the gold standard, where a country could “cheat” by temporarily suspending convertibility or hiding its reserves, the Information Standard relied on transparency forced by technology. In the 19th century, it took weeks for the news of a failed harvest or a reckless budget to reach London. Under the Information Standard, the “votes” of the market are cast in milliseconds.[2]
Wriston famously argued that the “twilight of sovereignty” was caused by the inability of borders to stop the flow of information. If a state acted against the interests of the global “Information Standard,” the capital it required for survival simply vanished into the electronic ether.
Under the Information Standard, a nation’s currency and creditworthiness became a “referendum” on its internal policies. If a government inflated its currency or mismanaged its debt, the news was telegraphed and televised across the world instantly, lighting up newly networked screens, and resulting in an immediate capital flight that functioned as a digital coup d’état.
While Walter Wriston correctly identified the emergence of the “Information Standard,” where the value of a currency was determined by the “votes” of the market, the physical manifestation of this standard was the birth of Spreadsheet Capitalism. This era was defined by the migration of economic rationality into microprocessor-based, grid-oriented global environments like the Reuters Monitor and the Bloomberg Terminal.
Reuters Monitor is the First Global Grid
Before 1973, financial information was siloed and slow. The Reuters Monitor, launched just as Bretton Woods collapsed, was the first microprocessor-based innovation to create a real-time “master spreadsheet” for the world. Oil uncertainties played into its success as did the Arab-Israeli War.
The Monitor transformed the chaotic “Information Standard” into a discrete set of coordinates on the shared grid. Each screen was essentially a static spreadsheet where bid/ask prices for currencies were “cells” updated via rapidly innovating Telecommunications Synchronization. Banks paid to access the money prices on Monitor, but also paid to list their own prices.
Traders stopped looking at gold-convertibility assurances or physical ledgers and started looking at a digital grid. This was the first step in spreadsheet Abstraction, the realization that money was no longer a thing, but a computable variable in a global microprocessor network. Trading desks, connected via slow telexes, had been career graveyards. That changed after Nixon took us off the gold standard, and new technologies were ready to speed up the action.
How Spreadsheet SACT Logic Facilitated Discipline
The “discipline” Wriston described was not just abstract sentiment; it was operationalized through spreadsheet logic, the reduction of complex national narratives into computable, comparable cells in a grid.
Spreadsheet logic forced countries to substitute their unique political priorities for standardized “performance indicators.” A nation’s health was no longer measured by its social cohesion, but by its cell on a Bloomberg terminal, specifically its Debt-to-GDP ratio or its 10-year Treasury yield. Countries fell into a tiered system under the USD.
The formulaic gaze abstracted reality into financial codes and representational grids. Microprocessor-based innovations like the Reuters Monitor and the Bloomberg “box” allowed for Abstraction. By treating a country as a row in a spreadsheet, the market could apply “formulas” (like the Black-Scholes model or VAR risk assessments) to determine its “value.” If the formula yielded a negative result, the “discipline” was automatic and algorithmic.
With the rise of high-speed computing, the “audit” of a nation became a continuous process. There was no “batch processing” of justice; if a central bank official head made a hawkish comment, the spreadsheet updated the “Interest Rate” cell instantly, triggering an automated sell-off.
Telecommunications via microwave towers, orbiting satellites, and undersea cables created global synchronicity of financial terminals. A policy change in Brazil was immediately visible in Tokyo and New York. This temporal coordination ensured that there was “nowhere to hide” for a recalcitrant nation, cementing the discipline of the Information Standard.
The Bloomberg “Box” Standardized the Spreadsheet
If Reuters built the global communications grid, Michael Bloomberg’s “box” (the Bloomberg Terminal) provided the Symbolic Computing power to manipulate it. With integrated analytics, the terminal moved beyond simple price-reporting to complex calculations. It embedded “Spreadsheet Logic” into the hardware itself. With the hit of a function key, a trader could perform a Bond Yield analysis or use one of many pre-programmed macros to model future cash flows and perform other analytics.
The primacy of the financial terminal created a proprietary version of the “Information Standard.” Being in the market meant being at a financial terminal, and the Bloomberg spreadsheet became the most popular. This technology was Substitution in action. The terminal’s data became a more “pristine” reality than the physical economy it supposedly represented.
Microprocessor Innovation and the “Formulaic” Economy
The proliferation of the microprocessor (Intel 8080 and its successors) allowed Spreadsheet Capitalism to scale. Platforms like BlackRock’s Aladdin and LSEG’s Workspace took the initial grid logic of the 1970s and added layers of Abstraction through risk-modeling algorithms. Personal computers, with their microprocessors, accelerated spreadsheet processing with Apple and VisiCalc, and with IBM and Lotus 1-2-3. Other spreadsheets emerged, such as Microsoft’s Multiplan, which was redeveloped for the Apple Mac’s GUI and became Excel when Windows emerged.
Spreadsheet logic introduced “What-If” analysis to global governance. National economies were no longer managed through historical wisdom but through simulations run on digital ledgers that stretched formulation across time and space.
With electronic treasuries created in the 1980s, US Treasuries became the “pristine collateral” of this system precisely because they were the most liquid and computable entries in the global spreadsheet. They were the “hard-coded” constants upon which all other variable formulas (Eurodollars, derivatives, swaps) depended. US Treasuries, combined with trade surpluses, Eurodollars, and petrodollar infusions, created a worldwide liquidity vehicle called the “USD.”
The Transition to SACT-AI
The “Information Standard” drew on SACT (Substitution, Abstraction, Computing, and Telecommunications) layers, turning the “messy reality” into cell values and abstracted instruments that could be registered and traded worldwide. However, Spreadsheet Capitalism remained human-dependent and batch-oriented in its high-level decision-making. As we move toward Bancor/ICU, the SACT-AI engine’s computable logic ensures the master balance sheet of humanity’s wealth remains in a state of sustainable, symmetric balance.
It moved from manual to reinforcement learning. Instead of a human trader entering a “What-If” scenario on a Bloomberg terminal, Q-learning agents continuously evaluate the global ledger for symmetry and stability.[3]
Instead of only punishing the “weak” (debtors), the Q-learning agent in SACT-AI Bancor/ICU applies the same spreadsheet discipline to “surplus” nations. If a country hoards capital, the system’s reward function, seeking global stability, imposes an automatic penalty on its Bancor-weighted quota.[4]
To move from static grids to more dynamic policies, PPO (Proximal Policy Optimization) added to the SACT-AI Bancor/ICU engine acts as a real-time auditor of the Information Standard, ensuring that a multipolar reserve basket buffers the volatility identified by Wriston.[5]
PPO provides the contextual audit when it ensures that discipline is “smart.” It can distinguish between a deficit caused by mismanagement and a deficit caused by an “Information Standard” shock or a sustainability transition. It fine-tunes liquidity to ensure “Stability with Scale,” maintaining reliable performance as size or volume grows.[6]
While Wriston’s Information Standard provided discipline, it was often procyclical and asymmetric, punishing Tier 5 economies while allowing Tier 1 hegemons to run deficits without immediate “spreadsheet” consequences, much like the Triffin Dilemma. The SACT-AI Bancor ICU upgrades this discipline from a “market-based punishment” to an “algorithmic symmetry.”
With SACT-AI’s Bancor/ICU engine, Wriston’s “Information Standard” can be finely tuned. The discipline is no longer a tool of the powerful used to enforce “spreadsheet capitalism” on the weak, but a universal, computable logic that ensures the master spreadsheet of humanity remains in a state of sustainable, symmetric balance.
In this view, the “Information Standard” wasn’t the final destination; it was the training data for the automated, symmetric global order that SACT-AI is designed to realize.
Summary
The blog post explores the transition of the global monetary order from the physical gold standard of Bretton Woods to Walter Wriston’s “Information Standard,” and finally to the proposed SACT-AI (Substitution, Abstraction, Computing, and Telecommunications) Artificial Intelligence framework. It argues that money has transitioned into “Spreadsheet Capitalism,” where national economies are managed and disciplined by digital grids.
The post concludes that while the previous Information Standard was asymmetric and punished the weak, the new SACT-AI engine, using Q-learning for symmetry and PPO for adaptive fine-tuning, realizes Keynes’s vision of a balanced, multipolar global ledger.
References
Pennings, A.J. (2010, Oct 03) How IT Came to Rule the World-The Information Standard and Other Sovereignties. apennings.com https://apennings.com/dystopian-economies/the-information-standard/
Pennings, A.J. (2021, Jun 08). Show-Biz: The Televisual Re-mediation of the Modern Global Economy. apennings.com https://apennings.com/how-it-came-to-rule-the-world/digital-monetarism/show-biz-the-televisual-re-mediation-of-the-modern-global-economy/
Schulman, J., Wolski, F., Dhariwal, P., Radford, A., & Klimov, O. (2017). Proximal policy optimization algorithms. arXiv preprint arXiv:1707.06347.
Watkins, C. J., & Dayan, P. (1992). Q-learning. Machine learning, 8(3-4), 279-292.
Wriston, W. B. (1992). The Twilight of Sovereignty: How the Information Revolution is Transforming our World. Scribner.
Notes
[1] I first wrote about the Information Standard as part of my PhD dissertation on Symbolic Economies and the Politics of Global Cyberspaces (1993). In the “Information Standard and Other Sovereignties” I used the newly published book to articulate the change that had occurred with the end of gold convertability ordered by President Nixon in 1971. The results were somewhat dissappointing but as I was living in New Zealand at the time, I could see how the Information Standard was disciplining the small country.
[2] Walter Wriston was the CEO and Chairman of Citicorp and considered a major innovator of the ATMs and CDs (Certificate of Deposits) Wriston, W. B. (1992). The Twilight of Sovereignty: How the Information Revolution is Transforming our World. Scribner.
[3] Watkins & Dayan, (1992) is a seminal work on Q-Learning.
[4] ibid.
[5] Schulman et al.(2017) introduced PPO.
[6] Schulman, J., Wolski, F., Dhariwal, P., Radford, A., & Klimov, O. (2017). Proximal policy optimization algorithms. arXiv preprint arXiv:1707.06347.
https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.1707.06347
Prompt: Describe how Walter Wriston’s “Information Standard” actually became what I call spreadsheet capitalism through the use of spreadsheet logic in Reuters’ Monitor, the Bloomberg “box” and other microprocessor-based innovations.
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Not to be considered financial advice. AI is often used, and results used are thoroughly interrogated. Citations are often in the links.
Anthony J. Pennings, PhD is a Professor at the Department of Technology and Society, State University of New York, Korea and a Research Professor for Stony Brook University. He teaches AI and broadband policy. From 2002-2012 he taught digital economics and information systems management at New York University. He also taught in the Digital Media MBA at St. Edwards University in Austin, Texas, where he lives when not in Korea.
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Tags: (SACT)AI Solutions > Information Standard > PPO > Q-Learning > reinforcement learning (RL) > Spreadsheet logic > Walter Wriston
Neutralizing the Milkshake Effect in SACT-AI Bancor/ICU Monetary Coordination
Posted on | April 20, 2026 | No Comments
Citation APA (7th Edition)
Pennings, A.J. (2026, Apr 21) Neutralizing the Milkshake Effect in SACT-AI Bancor/ICU Monetary Coordination. apennings.com https://apennings.com/political-economy-of-media/neutralizing-the-milkshake-effect-in-sact-ai-bancor-icu-monetary-coordination/
Introduction
This blog post continues the investigation of the operations of the global spreadsheet logic, USD centrality, and, more recently, the potential to realize John Maynard Keynes’s proposal at Bretton Woods, outlining an alternate global money coordination system. Keynes proposal was brilliant but lacked the economic and technological capabilities to be viable at the time. I recently asked my students in EST 392 – Engineering and Managerial Economics to examine various global currencies and how the “milkshake theory” influences monetary flows and policy worldwide. Their results suggest that the milkshake effect is substantial, but that the dollar-denominated monetary system is also a significant supplier of global liquidity. With the writing below, I consider a less dramatic transition with a significant role for the USD.[1]
A SACT-AI (Artificial Intelligence) global monetary coordination system reconfigured to Keynes’s Bancor/International Clearing Union (ICU) framework is engineered for balance sheet symmetry. A neutral Bancor as the unit of account, automatic multilateral netting, symmetric penalties on surpluses, and tier-calibrated adjustment eliminates persistent imbalances without national-currency dominance. Yet the question of maximizing the USD’s role within this neutral architecture reveals a deliberate transitional strategy. Rather than abrupt displacement, SACT-AI Bancor can be designed with layered mechanisms that preserve, extend, and strategically leverage USD liquidity, data advantages, and institutional infrastructure during a controlled phase-in.
Brent Johnson’s “Milkshake Theory” provides the perfect diagnostic lens for understanding this transition. The United States currently acts as the world’s largest “straw,” drawing global liquidity toward itself whenever domestic conditions tighten or dollar demand spikes. Capital flows from Tier 4 and Tier 5 emerging and peripheral economies into Tier 1 and Tier 2 during stress episodes, creating sudden shortages abroad while reinforcing US advantages.[2]
In a SACT-AI Bancor/ICU coordination system, the milkshake effect is not eliminated overnight but actively detected, neutralized, and internalized through AI-orchestrated surveillance and symmetric rules. This turns an extractive force (currency from periphery countries) into a managed, balanced flow while still allowing the USD to play a maximized transitional role.
Johnson’s Milkshake Theory explains why dollar shortages are structural. When the Fed raises interest rates, or signals reduced liquidity, global investors sell local assets and repatriate capital into USD to meet funding needs or chase higher US yields. This “sucking” action drains liquidity from the rest of the world, triggering currency depreciations, capital flight, and sudden stops in Tier 4 and Tier 5 economies.
Traditional ICT4D projects (rural broadband, mobile-money platforms) and ICT4SD initiatives (solar microgrids, AI4Good early-warning systems) are disproportionately affected because they rely on dollar-denominated imports and financing. The milkshake effect thus perpetuates the tiered USD hierarchy:
Tier 1 (US) benefits from cheap capital inflows and the ability to run deficits.
Tier 2 (Advanced Financial Centers) intermediates the flows and earns spreads.
Tier 3 (Export-Led Surplus Economies) recycles surpluses but remains partially subordinated.
Tier 4 (Emerging Markets) and Tier 5 (Peripheral Economies) absorb the shocks, experiencing procyclical booms followed by devastating contractions.
Eurodollar creation and petrodollar recycling amplify the straw’s suction power, turning the global financial system into a one-way liquidity pump (According to Johnson, as widely discussed in financial commentary). SACT-AI Bancor/ICU is explicitly designed to neutralize this extraction through symmetric, rule-based coordination. Symbolic Computing agents run continuous, multi-variable simulations that monitor capital-flow velocity, cross-currency basis swaps, and reserve drawdowns in real time.
When Milkshake-like suction is detected, the system automatically triggers Keynesian recycling mechanisms, actively rechanneling financial surpluses from high-saving (surplus) countries back into deficit countries, thereby stimulating demand and maintaining global economic equilibrium. Surplus Bancor balances in Tier 3 are charged and redirected as overdrafts to deficit quotas in lower tiers; tier-calibrated adjustment macros propose immediate rebalancing before shortages materialize; edge-AI nodes on renewable-powered 5G/6G towers feed granular, high-frequency data into the central ledger, enabling predictive rather than reactive intervention (Keynes, 1943; Piffaretti, 2009).
SACT-AI transforms the milkshake effect from an extractive force into a managed, symmetric flow. USD shortages are neutralized because liquidity is generated within the Bancor ledger rather than being pulled from peripheral markets. The result is smoother global financial and trade transactions, with traditional ICT4D assets protected from sudden stops and ICT4SD scaling becoming counter-cyclical rather than procyclical. Even in this neutral architecture, the USD can be strategically positioned to retain influence during transition without recreating the full milkshake asymmetry.
Transitional design choices include:
High initial basket weighting with algorithmically declining USD component, allowing the dollar (or a Treasury-backed stablecoin) to serve as the dominant collateral and settlement rail in early phases. Also, AI-driven reweighting macros reduce this weighting linearly or conditionally, tied to verifiable de-dollarization milestones. Another strategy is giving preferred collateral status for USD assets, giving Tier 1 a privileged but time-bound advantage in meeting quota requirements or buffering stress. AI agents apply preferential haircuts (charges to cover potential liquidity problems) and lower penalty thresholds for USD collateral.
Surveillance and data dominance in symbolic computing, incorporating US-centric sources (FOMC-style qualitative intelligence, Treasury market data) as high-trust inputs. This maximizes USD influence in early-warning models while AI enforces overall symmetry. Hybrid digital-USD interoperability, where a Treasury-backed stablecoin acts as the high-frequency execution layer for Bancor credits, preserving instant settlement and compliance while the neutral ledger handles multilateral netting.
These mechanisms maximize USD utility (deep liquidity, network effects, regulatory familiarity) while AI governance ensures the milkshake effect is capped. Any excessive suction is automatically offset by surplus recycling and quota expansion for lower tiers. The system thus achieves a controlled “soft landing” for the dollar — extending its role without permitting it to dominate the final architecture.
Tiered outcomes in the global USD system illustrate the strategic balance:
Tier 1 (United States) Retains transitional leverage through collateral preference and data dominance, mitigating the loss of pure USD hegemony.
Tier 2 (Eurodollar/Financial hubs) Continues to intermediate hybrid USD-Bancor instruments, earning spreads while gaining symmetry benefits.
Tier 3 (Export-led surplus economies) Faces gradual pressure to recycle surpluses productively rather than into dollar assets.
Tier 4 (Emerging markets) and Tier 5 (Frontier and peripheral economies) experience the greatest relief as the milkshake suction is replaced by predictable Bancor overdrafts, enabling stable scaling of traditional ICT4D into AI4Good and renewable infrastructure without procyclical disruption.
Link to Petrodollar and Tiered Impacts
Petrodollar recycling intensifies the milkshake effect because oil exporters, holding large dollar balances, often increase their purchases of US assets during periods of dollar strength, further draining liquidity from Tier 4 and Tier 5 markets. The tiered consequences are stark:
Tier 1 (United States) Receives cheap capital inflows, finances persistent deficits, and enjoys lower Treasury yields.
Tier 2 (Eurodollar hubs) Earns intermediation profits from recycling flows but remains exposed to Fed policy shocks.
Tier 3 (Export-led surplus economies, including major oil exporters) Accumulates reserves but becomes trapped in the recycling loop, supporting their export model at the cost of domestic rebalancing.
Tier 4 (Emerging markets) Experience episodic booms when oil prices are high and recycling is abundant, followed by sudden stops when the milkshake effect intensifies.
Tier 5 (Frontier and peripheral economies) Face the harshest impact — chronic exclusion from stable capital, reliance on volatile aid or commodity revenues, and “stability without scale” for ICT4D and ICT4SD projects.
In SACT-AI Bancor/ICU equilibrium, the milkshake effect is not eliminated but internalized and symmetrized: the USD becomes one high-quality input among many, and global liquidity flows according to real-economy needs rather than unilateral core demand.
Conclusion
Brent Johnson’s Milkshake Theory illuminates why the current USD-focused system extracts global liquidity. SACT-AI Bancor/ICU neutralizes this extraction through automatic recycling, predictive surveillance, and tier-calibrated adjustments. By strategically embedding transitional USD privileges (basket weighting, collateral preference, surveillance integration, and digital-stablecoin interoperability), the system can maximize the dollar’s role during reconfiguration while ensuring the milkshake reduces destabilization in USD lower tiers.
In a new system based on AI/SACT spreadsheet logic, this approach delivers the symmetric coordination Keynes envisioned. A computable ledger channels liquidity toward sustainable ICT4D rather than permitting unilateral extraction. SACT-AI Bancor/ICU (SABI) suggests the transition to multipolar money may be both politically viable and technically robust for the global economy.
References
Blockworks Macro. The Dollar Milkshake Theory Explained. YouTube. 2026. https://youtu.be/xxzy3sLs4Bs (Accessed March 29, 2026).
Keynes, J. M. (1943). Proposals for an international clearing union (Cmd. 6437). His Majesty’s Stationery Office. (Reproduced in IMF eLibrary, 2010). https://www.elibrary.imf.org/display/book/9781451972511/ch001.xml
Lenzu, S. (2026). Artificial intelligence and monetary policy: A framework and perspective on cyclical transmission, structural transition, and financial stability. Federal Reserve Bank of New York & NYU
Pennings, A.J. (2026, Apr 12) USD Liquidity: A Tiered Hierarchy Model and Implications for AI4Good and ICT4D. apennings.com https://apennings.com/characteristics-of-digital-media/usd-liquidity-a-tiered-liquidity-hierarchy-model-and-implications-for-ai4good-and-ict4d/
Pennings, Anthony J. Weak Domestic Dollar, Strong Global Dollar. apennings.com. August 3,
2022. https://apennings.com/dystopian-economies/weak-dollar-strong-dollar/
O’Malley, S. (2026, January 7). Dollar Milkshake Theory Illustration [Image]. The Investor’s
Podcast Network. https://www.theinvestorspodcast.com/dollar-milkshake-theory/
(Accessed March 30, 2026).
Real Vision. The Dollar Milkshake Theory Explained. Why the U.S. Dollar Strengthens During
Crises. YouTube. 2025. https://youtu.be/_SaG9HVXMQg (Accessed March 29, 2026).
Stern. https://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~slenzu/Papers/Lenzu_AI_and_MP.pdf
Piffaretti, N. F. (2009). Reshaping the international monetary architecture: Lessons from Keynes’ plan (Policy Research Working Paper No. 5034). World Bank.
Recommended Videos
Blockworks Macro. The Dollar Milkshake Theory Explained. YouTube. 2026. https://youtu.be/xxzy3sLs4Bs (Accessed March 29, 2026).
O’Malley, S. (2026, January 7). Dollar Milkshake Theory Illustration [Image]. The Investor’s Podcast Network. https://www.theinvestorspodcast.com/dollar-milkshake-theory/
(Accessed March 30, 2026).
Real Vision. The Dollar Milkshake Theory Explained. Why the U.S. Dollar Strengthens During Crises. YouTube. 2025. https://youtu.be/_SaG9HVXMQg (Accessed March 29, 2026).
Notes
[1] I wrote my Masters thesis on the end of Bretton Woods and the transition to a networked digital technologies in financial industries. I subsequently developed an interest in spreadsheet logic, which break down into the Substitution-Abstraction-Symbolic Computing-Telecom Synchronization (SACT) “Stack” of the global political economy.
[2] As I run a undergraduate program with a specialization in ICT4D, I have been examing the role of USD dynamics in various types of countries based on their interactions with the US dollar and Eurodollar lending markets.
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Not to be considered financial advice.
Anthony J. Pennings, PhD is a Professor at the Department of Technology and Society, State University of New York, Korea and a Research Professor for Stony Brook University. He teaches AI and broadband policy. From 2002-2012 he taught digital economics and information systems management at New York University. He also taught in the Digital Media MBA at St. Edwards University in Austin, Texas, where he lives when not in Korea.
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Tags: milkshake effect > Milkshake Theory > Network effects > SACT-AI Bancor/ICU > Substitution-Abstraction-Symbolic Computing-Telecom Synchronization (SACT)
Bretton Woods, Computation, and the Road Not Taken: Reimagining Keynes’s ICU in the Age of AI
Posted on | April 17, 2026 | No Comments
Citation APA (7th Edition)
Pennings, A.J. (2026, Apr 17) Bretton Woods, Computation, and the Road Not Taken: Reimagining Keynes’s Bancor/ICU in the Age of AI. apennings.com https://apennings.com/artificial-intelligence/bretton-woods-computation-and-the-road-not-taken-reimagining-keyness-icu-in-the-age-of-ai/
Introduction
The historical view of the Bretton Woods Conference often focuses on the political clash between American power (represented by Harry Dexter White) and British intellectual capital (represented by John Maynard Keynes). However, this view overlooks a critical factor: the physical limitations of information technology in 1944.
Keynes’ proposal for an International Clearing Union (ICU) and a new global currency, the Bancor, was elegant but required a level of computational speed, multilateral communication, and real-time data processing that did not exist. The standard view is that the Americans rejected the ICU for political reasons; a technological analysis suggests the system was operationally impossible.
Instead, the world adopted the US Dollar-Gold exchange standard—essentially a centralized “master spreadsheet” anchored in the physical reality of American gold reserves and punch-card tabulators. This system, while computable in 1944, introduced structural asymmetries that ultimately led to its collapse.
This analysis examines the profound mismatch between Keynes’ proposal, despite being grounded in economic theory, and the technological constraints available at the time of the 1944 Bretton Woods conference. It contrasts that history with the possibilities afforded by modern digital infrastructure and artificial intelligence. First, it presents a revised, annotated version of the historical analysis, integrating citations to support the central thesis that computational limits doomed Keynes’ ambitious proposals. Second, it shifts perspective, creating a counterfactual scenario in which the original conference is armed with modern tools.
The Computational Trap of 1944
The Bretton Woods Agreement, signed in July 1944, anchored the postwar monetary order to the US dollar. The dollar was fixed to gold at $35 per ounce, and all other currencies were pegged to the dollar.[1] This system delivered substantial stability and reconstruction for two decades. However, its operation relied on the dominant computing technology of the era: electromechanical tabulating machines, with punch cards, fed by telegraghed morse code and unreliable radiotelephony.[2]
At the heart of Bretton Woods lay this technological substrate, which inherently doomed Keynes’s ICU. Keynes’ vision required real-time multilateral clearing, the continuous adjustment of accounts between dozens of nations based on trade and capital flows. In 1944, data on balance of payments (BOP) was compiled via physical mail and telegraph, processed by hand or by tabulators that physically sorted cards at speeds of 100-300 cards per minute.[3]
A single global balance-of-payments netting exercise would have demanded weeks of physical card transport, manual reconciliation, and error-prone verification. The era’s technology could only support batch-processed, high-latency operations, making dynamic, automated clearing of an international currency like the Bancor fundamentally unfeasible.[4]
The Ascendance of the Dollar-as-Ledger
The US dollar became the de facto computable monetary unit not only because of American economic dominance but because the United States possessed the largest industrial base of tabulating machines at the time, and the only credible gold stock that could be physically audited and shipped/transferred. Other nations’ central banks held dollar claims as “good as gold” precisely because the US could tabulate and telegraph gold-convertibility assurances faster than any rival ledger system.
This technological asymmetry enshrined the dollar as the master spreadsheet. This system manifested three critical weaknesses: high-latency procyclicality, symmetric adjustment failure, and blindness to externalities:
Balance-of-payments statistics were compiled quarterly or annually, not in real time[5] This restriction delayed detection of imbalances by months. Corrective devaluations or IMF drawings occurred only after crises materialized, transmitting volatility directly to developing economies (Tiers 4 and 5).
The system also relied on discretionary IMF consultations rather than automatic mechanisms to correct persistent surpluses or deficits. US deficits accumulated (the Triffin Dilemma) until confidence crises forced runs on gold, a process the batch-processing ledger could not algorithmically forecast or prevent.[6]
The “spreadsheet” lacked the computational capacity to integrate development metrics (agriculture, energy, education, weather risk) into symbolic models, locking surpluses into vendor-financing traps and leaving developing economies stuck in stability without scale.
The Technological Collapse and Modern Remedy
The collapse of the Bretton Woods system in 1971, when President Nixon suspended dollar-gold convertibility, was a technological failure as much as a political one.[7] The tabulating-machine ledger could not scale to the exploding volume of Eurodollar creation and offshore liabilities, which grew beyond the auditing capacity of any central tabulator.
Modern technologies like scaled data centers, multi-agent AI, and 6G synchronization, collectively framed here as SACT-AI, provide the infrastructure Keynes lacked. This modern stack enables real-time, petabyte-scale multilateral netting, continuous non-linear simulations of Balance of Payments (BOP) scenarios, and automated risk-weighted adjustments [8].
Where Bretton Woods chose a centralized, batch-processed, high-latency data sheet, a modern system can be distributed, symmetric, and computable, finally synchronizing global liquidity with sustainable development imperatives rather than perpetuating the volatility embedded at Bretton Woods’ core.
Imagine if delegates at Bretton Woods had access to modern computational tools such as digital spreadsheets, real-time networks, and AI. Would the outcome have been radically different? Instead of choosing a dollar-centered system, they could have implemented Keynes’s ICU as a fully operational global clearing platform.
Such a system would have included:
– Real-time multilateral clearing via distributed digital ledgers
– AI-driven imbalance detection with automatic quota adjustments
– Symmetrical penalties on both surplus and deficit countries
– Integrated sustainability metrics, linking liquidity to energy and climate conditions.
In this alternate history, the Bancor would not have been dismissed as utopian. It would have been recognized as computationally viable. The result would likely have been:
– Reduced global imbalances
– Less dependence on a single national currency
– More stable funding for development and infrastructure
– Earlier integration of energy and environmental constraints into economic planning
In effect, the world would have adopted a coordinated computational monetary system, rather than a hierarchical reserve currency regime.
SACT-AI operates through hyperscale computation, real-time global synchronization, and continuous AI-driven modeling and surveillance. This enables:
– Instant multilateral netting across economies
– Dynamic liquidity allocation based on system-wide conditions
– Climate-aware financial coordination
– Distributed “master spreadsheets” replacing dollar centralization
In this system, SACT-AI would coordinate the following adjustments.
Tier 1 shares its control on liquidity issuance
Tier 2 gains stability through reduced funding shocks
Tier 3 redirects surpluses into coordinated global investment
Tier 4 avoids sudden stops of liquidity
Tier 5 gains access to scalable development financing
Conclusion: From Historical Constraint to Computational Possibility
Bretton Woods did not reject Keynes’s ICU because it was theoretically flawed. It rejected it because it was technologically impossible. The world chose the dollar not because it was ideal, but because it was computable within the constraints of mid-20th century infrastructure.
Today, those constraints no longer apply. SACT-AI provides the computational, informational, and synchronization capacities required to implement a true multilateral clearing system. The question is no longer whether such a system is feasible, but whether global institutions can coordinate its adoption.
In this sense, the transition from USD dominance to a more distributed monetary architecture is not a rupture, but a completion of an unfinished project. It is the realization of a global clearing system that Bretton Woods could only approximate.
References
[1] Steil, B. (2013). The Battle of Bretton Woods: John Maynard Keynes, Harry Dexter White, and the Making of a New World Order. Princeton University Press. (p. 2)
[2] Campbell-Kelly, M., & Aspray, W. (2004). Computer: A History of the Information Machine. Basic Books. (See Chapter 2, “The Census, the Card, and the Company,” on the dominance of punch-card tabulators.)
[3] Heide, L. (2009). Punced-Card Systems and the Office Automation of the 20th Century. Johns Hopkins University Press. (pp. 35-41, regarding processing speeds and batch orientation.)
[4] Keynes, J. M. (1943). “Proposals for an International Clearing Union.” Cmd. 6437. HMSO. (The core challenge of Keynes’ proposal was the multilateral nature of the clearing, which the existing bilateral, telegraph-based infrastructure could not support.)
[5] International Monetary Fund. (1948). First Annual Report of the Executive Directors. (p. 15, noting the infancy and significant lag-times in collecting standardized balance-of-payments data.)
[6] Triffin, R. (1960). Gold and the Dollar Crisis: The Future of Convertibility. Yale University Press. (This work established the Triffin Dilemma, detailing the fundamental conflict between national monetary policy and global reserve needs in the Bretton Woods system.)
[7] Garber, P. M. (1993). “The Collapse of the Bretton Woods Fixed Exchange Rate System.” In M. D. Bordo & B. Eichengreen (Eds.), A Retrospective on the Bretton Woods System. University of Chicago Press.
[8] Bank for International Settlements (BIS). (2023). “Key Features of a Modernized Cross-Border Payments System.” (This report, and others in the CPMI series, highlight how modern technology addresses the “latency” and “asymmetry” flaws identified in the original article.)
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Anthony J. Pennings, PhD is a Professor at the Department of Technology and Society, State University of New York, Korea, teaching AI and broadband policy while holding a joint position as a Research Professor for Stony Brook University. From 2002-2012, he taught digital economics and information systems management at New York University. He also taught in the Digital Media MBA at St. Edwards University in Austin, Texas, where he lives when not in Korea.
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Anthony J. Pennings, PhD was on the NYU faculty since 2001 teaching digital media, information systems management, and global economics. © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
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Tags: Balance of Payments (BOP) > Bancor > census tabulator > Herman Hollerith > International Clearing Union (ICU) > John Maynard Keynes > multilateral netting > risk-weighted adjustments > Telegraph





