DeFi wraps traditional finance instead of replacing it

A recent analysis argues that decentralized finance (DeFi) has failed to fulfill its promise of banking the unbanked by merely building on top of existing traditional finance infrastructure. Instead of creating new financial rails, DeFi relies on banks, regulators, and centralized systems for its core operations. This dependency limits its accessibility to those already excluded from the system.

Decentralized finance emerged with a compelling narrative: billions of people worldwide are unbanked due to traditional finance's slowness, exclusion, expense, and bias toward incumbents. Blockchains, being open, permissionless, global, and neutral, were supposed to provide a solution by banking the unbanked. However, after five years of growth, DeFi has not displaced traditional finance but has instead wrapped it, according to a crypto.news opinion piece published on January 11, 2026.

The article highlights that DeFi's essentials—money, identity, pricing, access, and liquidity—still derive from banks, regulators, and centralized infrastructure. Stablecoins like Tether (USDT) and USD Coin (USDC), which power on-chain activity, are backed primarily by bank deposits, Treasury bills, or custodial cash equivalents in the traditional system. Fiat on-ramps and off-ramps are managed by regulated intermediaries that control access. Price data comes from centralized exchanges via oracles, and user access depends on app stores, browsers, cloud providers, and payment networks within the existing financial order.

This structural reliance means DeFi cannot reach those excluded by traditional finance. The unbanked lack not just products like yield optimizers or decentralized exchanges, but fundamental infrastructure: reliable identity, connectivity, custody, payments, and dispute resolution. DeFi assumes stable internet, electricity, devices, identity, and legal recourse—precisely what many unbanked populations do not have. As the piece states, "DeFi assumes you can acquire stablecoins through regulated gateways. It assumes you can safeguard private keys. It assumes you can resolve mistakes."

The industry, the analysis contends, followed the path of least resistance, optimizing for speed, capital efficiency, and integration with banks rather than rebuilding from the ground up. This has led to dependency: when regulators tighten, liquidity contracts; when banks falter, stablecoins wobble. DeFi adoption thus aligns with wealth and access, benefiting traders, funds, and institutions over small merchants in places like Lagos or families in rural India.

True change requires unglamorous work: new payment systems without bank accounts, identity solutions independent of state issuance, and custody models for non-technical users. Without building actual rails—rather than wrappers or mirrors—DeFi remains "financial parasitism with better UX," optimizing for capital, not people. The next phase demands stepping away from financial centers toward inclusive infrastructure.

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