That's transaction volume in Bitcoin. If anything, it has gone down in two years. Do you think it might be, you know, because the value of 1 Bitcoin has increased thousands of percent, maybe?
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[quote author=curlyginger link=topic=612652.msg6781840#msg6781840 date=1400336909]
One of 2 things will happen long-term, either:
1) The blockchain and miners evolve to more easily support many high volume micro-transactions. The effect will be the cost to miners of managing micro-transaction will be lowered, and this will be passed on in the form of lower fees.
[/quote]
It depends on what you mean by micro transactions. Transactions of less than 1 US cent (circa 2014)? Probably not going to happen. This isn't just a miner issue. The blockchain is a public record. The cost of a transaction is borne by all nodes while the cost by be relatively low on a per tx basis it isn't zero. The other thing to consider is the critical resource is space so tx are always going to be priced on a per tx (well per kb but the tx size for most txs is a relatively small range) not as a % basis. This means the effective cost of smaller tx as a % of the value transferred is going to be higher.
That being said Bitcoin doesn't need to have to support txs which are a thousandth of a US penny and have fees of less that are a billionth of a penny. It just needs to be cheaper, faster, and more secure than the alternatives. The most successful digital currency in Africa is mPesa which enforces a min tx value of $0.10 and at that level fees are $0.03 per tx (30% of value). Can Bitcoin beat that? Yes.
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mPesa fee tariffs (values converted to USD)
Min Transfer: $0.10 fee $0.03 (30%)
Max Transfer: $700.00 fee $1.10 (1.6%)
Min Agent Withdraw: $0.50 fee $0.10 (20%)
Max Agent Withdraw: $700.00 fee $3.30 (4.7%)
Min ATM Withdraw: $2.00 fee $0.33 (17%)
Max ATM Withdraw: $200.00 fee $1.93 (1.0%)