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by FeepingCreature
1774 days ago
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The intent is to be outcompeted as an investment vehicle. The goal is approaching zero investment. I'm thinking that inflation would be priced in as platform fees for exchanges. Thinking of transactions in terms of throughput, the question is "how long do I have to store EUR in INF to be able to match an EUR sell with a buy." The transaction fee would be (at least) the inflation over that range. The notion that blockchains should produce value by competing for investment is exactly the wrong idea that I'm trying to avoid. An inflation half-life of a week is probably excessive. It really only has to be bigger than the IRL currencies it interfaces with. (Which in turn only have to be bigger than the value growth in their market.) But proposing a high inflation like that puts the focus of efficiency and monetary gain on improving transaction performance, which is imo where it should be. Also having a high inflation lets you limit the size of the ledger - eventually, old transactions simply become irrelevant by being too comparatively small to matter. You could even reward people for erasing their historic transactions - ie. allow them to roll several historic transactions into one, as a way to reduce the inflation tax. (Or phrased differently, tax ledger entries.) |
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