A "report" not covering the greatest current use case for the currency - namely anonymously buying weed through the Internet tubes? Not saying it is a good thing, just that there's actual value creating going on. Right now.
Hi there. Actually, I did cover value of Bitcoin in use as a medium of exchange in footnote 2. Because there is no production in the bitcoin economy, or very little to be entirely accurate, the real exchange rate should basically be one. Why? Because most users of bitcoin live within very large production economies. Why would buyers pay more or sellers accept less, if they would be better of transacting in the domestic economy?
You might imagine a slight premium for bitcoins because they facilitate transactions that would be difficult in the domestic economies, such as money laundering or black market trade, but you could just as easily argue that the real exchange rate is less than one due to the relatively lower number of people to trade with, concerns regarding being hacked, and uncertainty regarding future government regulation of bitcoin. That's why I decided the most neutral approach would be to assume purchasing power parity across bitcoins. Admittedly, this assumption may not be great as speculation runs rampant and everyone runs for the exits, which would imply a heavy discount in the real exchange rate.
Moving money across borders is an use for Bitcoin as well. If you're living in Iran (or North Korea or Syria or Palestine) Bitcoin could very well solve your liquidity problem, in the same way the TOR network helps to solve a government-imposed-firewall issue.
You might imagine a slight premium for bitcoins because they facilitate transactions that would be difficult in the domestic economies, such as money laundering or black market trade, but you could just as easily argue that the real exchange rate is less than one due to the relatively lower number of people to trade with, concerns regarding being hacked, and uncertainty regarding future government regulation of bitcoin. That's why I decided the most neutral approach would be to assume purchasing power parity across bitcoins. Admittedly, this assumption may not be great as speculation runs rampant and everyone runs for the exits, which would imply a heavy discount in the real exchange rate.