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by zupa-hu
3210 days ago
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I'm confused. Gresham's law sais "bad money drives out good". Inflation is bad, so from that follows that the money that inflates more will be more used. Okay, I buy that. Then this: > When the singularity is reached, I think people will be more likely to choose to spend their inflationary fiat currency instead of their deflationary cryptocurrency. I'm lost here. People already prefer to spend USD over Bitcoin. So I understand the change would be if Bitcoin inflates faster, because then people will prefer to spend Bitcoin. But the article sais the opposite. Or doesn't "stable against USD" mean that Bitcoin will inflate/deflat at around the same rate as USD? Interesting article, I'd love to understand it! Anyone? |
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Bitcoin is going up in value, and according to the market predictions it will go way higher, so it's deflationary.
Bitcoin holders will prefer to spend cash money to bitcoins anytime in speculation of future gains.
I see bitcoin more of a speculative investment at the moment, than a type of currency. Only the ones that are riding the bitcoin trains seems to think this is the future of money. Outside that bubble nobody really uses it.