| I'm afraid this is the complete misunderstanding of what money is for. You're describing the best medium of exchange, which you know today generally as base money of fiat currencies (cash). Acting as a medium of exchange is a property money can have but absolutely does not require to be used for its principal and only use which is to store value. Why is that its only function? Because the only way to use a medium of exchange is to find in turn someone who wants to store wealth himself. Absent that market participant your medium of exchange becomes worthless. Acting as a medium of exchange is a transitory instant blip in the life of an asset that lives for the sole actual purpose of storing wealth. Now if the average redemption horizon of monetary wealth was short as you seem to imply, then in effect all monetary assets would be used frequently as mediums of exchange and their capacity to preserve value over meaningful periods of time would be less of a consideration. Becoming accepted for payments everywhere would become the most important feature they could have. But this is absolutely not the case. The average redemption horizon of monetary wealth today is very long. Some 200tn+ of monetary wealth sits today in various monetary instruments (100tn+ in fiat treasuries equivalent, real estate, 10tn in gold etc) that are absolutely never used as mediums of exchange. But they serve monetary assets' main and only role of preserving wealth through time, generally for long periods of time. Even the bulk of cash generally sits dormant as medium to long term investments by people holding onto the most liquid of reserve assets in case of crisis / emergency, very rarely to be used transactionally. Whenever those investors need some transactional money, they simply then clip off a little bit of their monetary assets to buy whatever medium of exchange is en vogue to go about their daily spending habits. The rest sits idle to store wealth for as long as needed. And on that front, finding the hardest monetary asset you can find is your driving concern, and a digital new entrant like bitcoin with a hard cap is an extremely interesting alternative to other options available to this point which all have material drawbacks to that main goal, especially fiat currencies which get inflated by their central banks at a bare minimum of 25% per decade (but these days more like 15%+ per year). |