SoFi's Stablecoin, the Genius Act, and the Back-Door Plan to Keep the Dollar Alive

If you've spent any time reading about monetary history, Austrian economics, or the long-term trajectory of the US dollar, you've probably thought about this question: how does it keep going?

The dollar has been inflated, stretched, weaponized as a geopolitical tool, and decoupled from every hard asset it was once tied to, and yet it remains the world's dominant reserve currency. On Episode 038 of Between the Lies, Rob Brayton and Nicky P take a close look at the newest mechanism the financial system has deployed to keep that story going a little longer: the bank-issued stablecoin.

This episode is a good starting point if you're new to the show. Between the Lies is a weekly financial podcast produced under the Perfect Spiral Capital brand that approaches monetary policy, economic history, and personal finance strategy through the lens of Austrian economics and the Infinite Banking Concept. The goal isn't doom and gloom, it's clarity about what's actually happening, and what you can do about it regardless.

It is a way to undermine other countries’ central banking systems with the dollar. That’s what stablecoins provide the ability to do.
— Rob Brayton, Between The Lies, Episode 038

What We Covered

SoFi's Stablecoin and the Genius Act

SoFi Bank recently launched a dollar-pegged stablecoin under the framework established by the Genius Act, legislation that opened the door for banks to issue what the law calls "authorized payment stablecoins." The coin is backed one-to-one by US Treasury securities. Rob explains that this isn't just a fintech novelty: it's a mechanism to extend US dollar access to people who currently have none.

Billions of people globally are unbanked, not because they've opted out, but because functioning banking infrastructure doesn't exist in their countries. A dollar-pegged digital currency they can access without a bank account creates real demand for dollars in places that previously had limited access to them.

The Dollar Demand Mechanism, and What It Slows Down

Nicky P frames the petrodollar context clearly: one of the structural reasons the dollar has held its global position is that major commodities, historically oil, are priced in dollars. Countries needed to hold dollars to participate in global trade. As that requirement weakens, a long-standing fear in Austrian circles is that the dollars exported globally start flowing home, creating an inflationary repatriation event.

Stablecoins create a new source of dollar demand that partially offsets that dynamic. Rob notes that Federal Reserve Governor Waller explicitly framed this as a way to "import US monetary policy" across borders, to extend the Fed's monetary influence into countries that would otherwise escape it.

If any country’s really good at playing stuff through the back door, it’s the US, making it seem like it’s somebody else. It’s been happening for a long time.
— Rob Brayton, Between The Lies, Episode 038

Back-Door Dollar Strategy and the China Parallel

Rob identifies stablecoins as a tool for undermining foreign central banks. Countries with chronically high inflation, Nigeria, Turkey, Argentina, and others, become natural markets for dollar-denominated digital currency. Citizens of those countries have strong incentive to hold something stable, and a dollar stablecoin answers that need. It also, as Rob and Nicky P note, functions as soft competition with China's Belt and Road Initiative, both are plays to lock in economic relationships on a global scale.

What It Means for IBC Practitioners

The episode closes with a direct question: does any of this change the IBC picture? Rob's answer is no. The private banking framework built around dividend-paying whole life insurance policies operates on 100% reserve principles, it doesn't depend on the Fed getting monetary policy right, the dollar maintaining its reserve status, or stablecoins succeeding or failing. The infrastructure works regardless of what the macro environment does.

As opposed to kind of letting the whole thing break apart, they actually found what offers stability in countries that don’t have stable currencies, while it props up the biggest central bank in the world.
— Nicky P, Between The Lies, Episode 038

Key Takeaway

Stablecoins are not a solution to the monetary problems Austrian economists have identified, they are the system's latest creative mechanism for extending the timeline. Rob put it plainly: "It's not solving any problem. It's just a more creative way to kick the can down the road." The actionable insight here is the same one Between the Lies returns to repeatedly: build financial infrastructure that functions independently of whether the system holds or breaks. IBC is that infrastructure.

It’s not solving any problem. It’s just a more creative way to kick the can down the road.
— Rob Brayton, Between The Lies, Episode 038
I’m thinking strictly for me, where I’m at economically positioned. And in regards to that, it makes me not feel too bad for the immediate future.
— Nicky P, Between The Lies, Episode 038

FAQ

  • SoFi Bank launched the first major bank-issued stablecoin under the Genius Act, a dollar-pegged digital currency backed one-to-one by US Treasury securities. It matters because it extends dollar access to billions of unbanked people globally and generates new demand for US dollars and Treasuries in countries that previously had limited access to either.

  • By giving people in countries with unstable or nonexistent banking systems a way to hold and transact in dollars digitally, stablecoins increase global demand for the dollar. More demand for dollars means less pressure on the domestic money supply, it temporarily slows the inflationary effect of all the dollars the Fed has printed and exported over the decades.

  • Not exactly. A central bank digital currency (CBDC) would be issued directly by the Federal Reserve and represent a direct claim on the central bank. A bank-issued stablecoin like SoFi's is issued by a private institution and backed by Treasury securities rather than the Fed itself. The distinction matters for how they can be used and controlled, but both are mechanisms for expanding dollar-denominated digital money.

  • According to Rob Brayton, not in any material way. The Infinite Banking Concept operates through dividend-paying whole life insurance policies that are structurally independent from monetary policy, Fed decisions, or stablecoin adoption. Whether stablecoins extend the dollar's dominance for another decade or accelerate its decline, the private banking framework built through IBC doesn't depend on the outcome.

  • Because timing matters for people living in the system right now. Short-term dollar stability, even manufactured stability, affects purchasing power, interest rates on policies, and the cost of capital. The goal isn't to cheer for the dollar. It's to understand the timeline and build financial infrastructure that functions whether the dollar holds for twenty more years or five.

  • The Genius Act is US legislation that created a legal framework for banks to issue authorized dollar-pegged stablecoins backed by US Treasury securities. It effectively formalized the stablecoin market for regulated financial institutions and opened the door for major banks to issue their own digital dollar products. SoFi was the first to move.