Author

Topic: Can we have a Bitcoin but with 1-2% constant inflation and slower halving? (Read 492 times)

sr. member
Activity: 365
Merit: 251
I don't think most people know what they're talking about regarding inflaton/deflation. You don't actually need inflation at all. What's exactly is wrong with falling prices? 
Inflation encourages savers to invest their money rather than just stuffing it under a mattress; they need to get an interest rate of at least the inflation rate, or else the value of their savings will erode. Investment is claimed to be good for the economy. It means people getting paid to do stuff, rather than there being no jobs and no production or consumption.

Governments can manipulate the economy to some extent by adjusting interest rates, and making it easier or harder for people to borrow. There's a limit to how low interest rates can go because they can't be negative, but increasing inflation by 1% has a similar effect to decreasing interest rates by the same amount, and so a steady rate of inflation of around 2-3% gives them a bit more flexibility.

Obviously not everyone agrees with the above, especially in Bitcoin circles, but I believe it's the mainstream economics view.
hero member
Activity: 1328
Merit: 563
MintDice.com | TG: t.me/MintDice
peercoin or other pos coins sound like what you are looking for
full member
Activity: 168
Merit: 100
I don't think most people know what they're talking about regarding inflaton/deflation. You don't actually need inflation at all. What's exactly is wrong with falling prices? 

You want something that somewhat corresponds with growth in the economy (as tech advances, we become more efficient every year).

I've invested in a few coins with a fixed inflationary coin supply after the mining is done: Quark (.5%), Doge (5%) just because I think that both will have uses in addition to Bitcoin which is 0% new coins after mining.
legendary
Activity: 1092
Merit: 1000
Hyperspace snail
newbie
Activity: 25
Merit: 0
I don't think most people know what they're talking about regarding inflaton/deflation. You don't actually need inflation at all. What's exactly is wrong with falling prices? 
sr. member
Activity: 365
Merit: 251
I think a kind of reverse Gresham's Law will apply. In other words, a merchant given the choice between bitcoin that will appreciate in value, and an altcoin that will depreciate, will prefer bitcoin.

(Gresham's Law says that bad money drives out good. As far as I can tell it only applies to fiat money, where the merchant is legally required to accept the bad money because it is government-mandated legal tender. If the merchant has a choice, they'll reject it or only accept it at a premium.)
member
Activity: 72
Merit: 10
Bitcoin is too deflationary which makes it a perfect store of value as primary use and currency as secondary use.

A 2% inflation coin would be a perfect currency primarily which may eventually even replace national currencies. 

Doge is not % inflationary. It has a constant addition of 5 billion coins which means that the inflationary percentage of the market cap gradually goes down to eventually become deflationary.

A constant % on the other hand would be a 1-2% of the market cap every year forever onwards.

This is very different from the fed simply printing money etc. The 1-2% covers losses and accounts for a growing economy so in real terms it is almost 0% inflation or deflation. Thus as close to a neutral currency as possible.

If someone can please code this then I think we would have a winner currency to supplement the winner store of value that is bitcoin.
Jump to: