This paper closes the trilogy on the orderly transition from the debt-based fiat system to Gradido. Part 1 dissolved sovereign debt and, in doing so, named a hard remainder — the global reserve core, that part of the debt which foreign central banks hold not as a yield investment but as a security reserve. Neither the transformation of individual holders nor coordination within a currency area reaches this block; it stays behind once everything else is dissolved. This paper asks whether it, too, can be dissolved in an orderly, voluntary, positive-sum way. The answer turns on a single reversal: the reserve core dissolves not because its holders give something up, but because GradidoTransform (GDT) itself becomes, over time, a neutral, gold-like store-of-value reserve. Part 3 is therefore not a new procedure but the same mechanism seen from the other side: the reserve holder acquires the GDT not on a market but in exactly the transformation that Part 1 described for tier 4. The trilogy comes full circle. Like its siblings, this paper understands itself as a feasibility and mechanism study, not a forecast. What carries the case is the value basis. A reserve asset is only as credible as that which secures its value. Gold's value basis is scarcity, a government bond's the creditworthiness of its issuer, Bitcoin's the sheer scarcity of a thing. The value basis of the GDT is the human being — per-capita creation, equal participation by virtue of need, not the remuneration of labour-time. From this one source all four reserve virtues follow at once: value stability (the money supply is determined per capita, not arbitrarily expandable), freedom from default (creation continues as long as there are people), neutrality (the value basis is no sovereign), and egalitarian distribution (per capita, not by scarcity). At the same time the GDT is no permanent gold substitute, but an asset for a time: the name says so — a unit for the time of the transformation. Every holding is annuitised over a self-chosen corridor and thus enters the transient Gradido cycle step by step. This buys its safety with illiquidity: the GDT is gold minus the spot market — one cannot sell it, only annuitise it. For a holder whose motive is safety rather than saleability, this is the right trade: temporary and fully predictable instead of permanent and fluctuating. Finally, the dynamic decides whether the mechanism ever takes hold — and it defuses the gravest objection. Reserve adoption begins not with the mighty but with the weakest: privately, as a store of value, without any institution having to consent; then at the margin of ongoing reserve diversification; then with a pioneer state. It spreads not through the incumbent's conviction but through the demonstrated success of the first adopters — through domestic prosperity and the elimination of poverty in the pilot countries. From this it follows that the hard reserve core, the dollar, comes last — pulled along or isolated, not persuaded. The most powerful incumbent therefore cannot block the transformation, because it proceeds without him. In the aggregate the process is positive-sum: the reserve issuer's exorbitant privilege falls away, but no new privilege arises elsewhere — reserve power is dissolved, not redistributed. The paper names its open points — the legal-institutional path from a voluntary holding to an official reserve, the risk of a world fragmenting into blocs, the still-unfinished bridge between today's money and Gradido — and positions the GDT as a convergence finding within the roughly eighty-year search for a neutral reserve medium: from Triffin through Keynes and the Special Drawing Rights to Lietaer. Connectability as a stance, not superiority. With Part 1 (sovereign), Part 2 (private), and this Part 3 (reserve core), the entire financial layer becomes transferable in an orderly, voluntary, positive-sum way — while the real economy carries over unchanged.
Bernd Hückstädt (Fri,) studied this question.
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