So, this time instead of gold we will have Bitcoin (which will be hoarded as per Gresham's law) and all kinds of "paper" derivatives inevitably entering the circulation as a means of exchange. These "papers" allegedly backed up by Bitcoin will in fact leave behind them only inflation, even despite Bitcoin intrinsic deflationary nature...
And welcome back to fiat!
You know, I thought Gresham's Law was going to kick in too, especially on this latest run up.
Bit of background, at easyDNS we started accepting bitcoin in the spring of this year (making us one of only two ICANN accredited registrars who accept bitcoin and the only CIRA certified registrar in Canada who does).
As the price of bitcoin started rising I thought "aha, now we will see transaction volume fall accordingly" - why will people buy their services from us using ever increasing bitcoin?
As an example, we sponsor the Let's Talk Bitcoin podcast, we paid the first few months in USD, because we hadn't yet accumulated enough bitcoin to pay for a sponsorship. Then we switched to BTC as we started getting customers using it.
But a curious thing happened next, the price of bitcoin went over $400 or so, so when I finally met Adam Levine at Crypto-currency-con in Atlanta, I handed him a cheque for our next four months' sponsorship. We were back to using USD, and I literally said "Sorry Adam, I know you like bitcoin but this is Gresham's Law in action".
So on the latest spike, you would expect our transaction volume to fall off a cliff, right?
Wrong. Transaction volume is up, significantly.
So my working theory is because bitcoin is inelastic, the value is rising so fast that the deflationary effect hits some tipping point, offsetting Gresham's Law. There could be some "point" where people don't mind spending the stronger currency, because it takes so much less of it to purchase the desired good or service.