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by logifail
1920 days ago
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> If your customer is willing to spend BTC they own for your services[..] In this scenario, would one's rate be set in BTC, or fiat? I'm struggling to understand how a (non-crypto) business could want to hire a contractor at - let's say - 0.016 BTC/day, then watch the real (fiat) cost of that rate change value as the crypto markets move. "We hired a contractor at what was $100/day but right now it's costing us $1000/day because we agreed to fix her rate in BTC" ? Isn't this essentially like agreeing to pay someone in gold, or any other random commodity? |
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You set the rate in USD, and do the currency conversion upon sending.
> I'm struggling to understand how a (non-crypto) business could want to hire a contractor at - let's say - 0.016 BTC/day
You’re right, BTC is too volatile to set the price in it in advance. But it is a perfectly good payment method.
It’s true that if you need the money you receive in BTC to feed your family tomorrow or they starve, then BTC is not convenient and too risky due to price fluctuations. But if you’re a reasonably compensated professional or a business with healthy margins, there’s very little downside in receiving 10—20% of money as crypto, and potentially very high upside.