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It's pretty difficult to stabilize a cryptocurrency the same way as regular currencies are, if just because there is no good way of cutting the money supply. This makes trying to stabilize the price to some set of goods very difficult, because no matter what you pick, you'll have to cut supply somehow, and that just won't work without something akin to a central bank. The internal measures, unfortunately, are very easy to game. Take, for instance, an option that is now being considered among academics for regular currencies: NGDP targetting. It'd be very easy to check the NGDP of a cryptocurrency: It's really just trade volume. So it'd not be difficult to attach a coin's supply increase to the volume. We could pick a currency's codebase and make a competitor that did such targeting withing the day. The problem is that it would not work. NGDP for a real country is fairly hard to game. It's not as if I can suddenly create real economic activity without major costs to myself, at the very least in taxes and fees. The money is also spread enough that such effort would not really match rewards, even in an NGDP targetting regime. In a cryptocurrency though, it's another matter. Transaction costs are tiny for large transfers, and someone with a large balance would be able to create large volume for pennies. Those that would have an easier time doing this are those with a lot of coin, which are exactly the people that would have a lot more to gain from currency manipulation. I lack any mathematical proof that a stabilization system that is based on what a user cares about, expected value of the coin in a few months/years, is not possible. However I'd be very surprised if there was a solution that worked in the case that a few actors control a significant percentage of the coin's supply, and as it is, this is a characteristic shared by every major cryptocurrencies today. What makes things worse is that many cryptocurrency proponents would consider any of this stabilization mechanisms to be undesirable anyway. So even if we found a way, would the many people that believe that devaluation hurts savers be on board? A currency that did manage do behave a lot more like a traditional currency would probably not be what those people want, regardless of what the state of the art in economics believes. So we are back to Betteridge's law of headlines: Any headline which ends in a question can be answered with the word no. |
[0]: http://computationallyendowed.com/blog/2013/11/27/bitcoin-de...