Peter Schiff engaged in a debate with CZ at Binance Blockchain Week after challenging Bitcoin’s legitimacy as a generator of real economic value.
Speaking on stage opposite Changpeng Zhao (CZ), Schiff argued that Bitcoin is a zero-sum wealth transfer rather than a productive asset.
Here is Schiff’s full statement as delivered during the debate:
This is true to the extent that any freely traded asset, such as equities, gold, land, fine art, also transfers wealth between participants depending on entry price, exit price, and market conditions.
But Schiff implies that this transfer is zero-sum. That’s inaccurate. Bitcoin’s network itself generates utility, which is distinct from price.
Bitcoin today powers cross-border settlement, functions as a censorship-resistant store of value, and serves as collateral across financial platforms.
Value is generated through capability, not just material form. A global network that moves capital instantly without banks or intermediaries is a new economic function. That is wealth creation by definition.
If Bitcoin merely redistributed value, it would not underpin payment channels, custody platforms, or multi-billion-dollar remittance rails.
A zero-sum asset does not attract corporate treasuries, institutional ETFs, or nation-state adoption.
Wealth does not rely on physical substance. It relies on demand, utility, consensus, and the ability to preserve or transfer value.
Schiff’s logic could be applied historically to:
By that standard, software, internet DNS space, AI models, and even fiat money would also fail to qualify as wealth. Yet these intangible systems power most of today’s economy.Bitcoin created something that did not exist in monetary history: a bearer asset that moves like data, settles without intermediaries, and is mathematically verifiable.
That feature is comparable to gold digitization but without storage, transport, or assay friction.
Wealth was created because new capabilities emerged.
This rests on the assumption that Bitcoin will collapse. It could — but it is not a fact, it is a projection.
If Bitcoin remains in demand globally, scarcity and network growth sustain value.
If adoption grows further — as has occurred across ETFs, corporate treasuries, and sovereign custody — then Schiff’s prediction weakens.
His view equates unrealized gains with illusions. But:
His thesis only holds if Bitcoin fails as a monetary network. And more than a decade of growth suggests the opposite direction.
Peter Schiff’s comments captured headlines and sparked discussion, but his reasoning overlooks key economic realities.
Bitcoin is not merely a wealth transfer. It is a functioning global monetary network with attributes that no traditional asset class replicates.
The argument that it “creates no wealth” relies on outdated assumptions about where value originates.


