I wasn't talking about the total debt of the Government, I mean the debt they owe from buying Federal Reserve Notes. You're right, interest isn't necessarily a problem, the real problem is that whilst the FED can print their notes very cheaply, the Government trades them debt equal to the full value of those notes denominations. There's absolutely no reason they should need to go through this whole convoluted process to give the illusion the notes are backed by something. Because the result is that the Government goes into debt for things they don't need to go into debt for.
Right, it means the wealthy elite owns the government, not the fed. You could argue that they are heavily related, but they are definitely not one and the same.
Personally I don't see the point of that, it's like continuously printing more money, but carried out at "just the right amount" so that the value of the currency remains the same over an infinite amount of time. I don't particularly see the point, what is wrong with a deflationary currency?
lol. The point is it is akin to roman coins and british tally sticks and greenbacks without the need for the government (or the wealthy padding politician's pockets) to decide what is "just the right amount."
And actually, I don't think Bitcoin could keep deflating forever, because economic growth and demand can only increase so much before it reaches some sort of stable position and maximum threshold. It's not like the early-adopters are going to benefit forever.
Any idea when this is going to happen? Because it hasn't happened since economics began however many thousands of years ago. Must we endure the business cycle ad infinitum until we finally reach this mythical point? And I pointed out that gold-backed currency's problems is the reason we moved to fiat, and how bitcoin is essentially gold-backed without fractional reserve, so where is the benefit in bitcoin as a currency? Better the devil that is a few decades removed from the present than the devil you currently know?
What happens if the threshold of demand is reached with EnCoin but the system is still capable of creating more units? Even if it's not profitable could someone still mine more to cause inflation?
Although I only posted a snippet of the idea late in the thread, I've since heavily refined the idea of giving away free money when people are mining. Not only does it prevent silly malicious miners from devaluing the currency, it also reduces the amount of electricity wasted on mining. Free money will be given to people spending money (encourages trade even more) as well as to all existing account balances. So even if the currency inflates, everyone gets more coins for it so in the end it is of no matter. It also protects against future hashing vulnerabilities.