Strenghts of cryptocurrencies over traditional money

in cryptocurrency •  7 years ago 

Money by definition is an arbitrary medium for a store of value. In

ancient times, people used what was considered rare in order to exchange

as money; precious metals, cowry in landlocked countries or Central

areas, precious stones, pearls, and many other things. In more modern

times we have standardized forms of exchange in the form of a coins or

banknotes approved by a central Authority.

All money serves some basic functions; just to quickly recap, they

are:

1.Money must be a store of value. If the ‘value’ of money changes

drastically from one day to the next, people will stop using it and

turn to other types of stores of value.

2.Money must be usable as a unit of account. You need to be able

to relate the “value” of money to the value of something else,

say 10 cowry shells for a bowl of noodles or one gold ingot for a

horse.

3.Money must be usable as a medium of exchange. You cannot be

the only one trading in cowry shells, everyone else must be ready

to accept them as a means of payment. If you go from the

landlocked areas where cowry shells are rare to the seaside

towns where cowry shells are plentiful, it may not be recognised;

the same as when you travel to a different country today.

Today almost every nation in the world has its own form

of fiat currency backed by no assets and issued by the

government valued at its ability to serve as tax credit.

When we look back that’s actually not much difference

between cowrie shells and fiat currency both of them

arbitrary means of a store of value. When you think about

it, there is as much value and utility in a piece of paper as

there is in a cowry shell, but we recognise them not for

their intrinsic value but rather their exchange value.

Additionally, cowry shells and bank notes share some

similar characteristics that enable their common use as

money: durability, portability, divisibility, uniformity,

limited supply (or rarity) and acceptability.

Characteristics of Crypto-Money

So how about crypto? How well does cryptocurrency work as

money? I wouldn’t just say that it works well, I’d say that

cryptocurrencies are even better than what we are using

today as money (government issues fiat and bank-issued

credit). Let’s take a look at each characteristic in the context

of crypto:

1.Durability Crypto isn’t even physical! It’s definitely durable

compared to a physical product. But wait, isn’t it just data?

Can’t it be destroyed like hard disks and thumb drives?

Technically it could, but the blockchain which record every

individual fraction of crypto is distributed across nodes. You

can’t destroy 1 node to wipe that record, you’d need to

destroy all of them.

2.Portability Due to its electronic nature, crypto is stored “in the

cloud” similar to dollars in your bank account. All you need to pay

in crypto is a phone application and wifi or a mobile data

connection to send requests to the blockchain.

3.Divisibility While you can break dollars into cents and think

that’s very divisible. Not only that, every time you break a dollar

into cents, you actually decrease the portability of money on your

person as weight and space go up but the value of money goes

down. This creates another interesting issue faced by some

countries in relation to coins; in some cases of inflation, they find

criminal or citizens debasing their currency and melting it down

due to the metal value of the coins being higher than their

exchange value! Fortunately, we will never have this issue with

non-physical cryptocurrencies and be able to divide as much as

we choose.

4.Uniformity Each unit of cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from

the next. While even some notes have serial numbers to indicates

authenticity or minting order, if you transfer 1 Bitcoin to a wallet

with 9 bitcoins, even the owner is not able to you which of the

Bitcoins he received; they are perfectly identical and fungible.

5.Acceptability Probably the only aspect the crypto currently

loses out to fiat from is in its acceptability as a medium of

exchange. However, the situation is quickly changing and the

more cryptocurrencies get exposure, the greater the rate of

public adoption of crypto as payments and transactions.

6.Limited supply Governments will print money endlessly in order

to fund public spending as taxation is usually insufficient in itself.

Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, however, have a hard limit as

determined by software: no one can ever create more Bitcoin and

even if they performed a hardfork to do so, they would likely be

the only ones who accepted the “new” currency created.

When it comes to pure utility as money, it seems that

crypto is unmatched as long as it is accepted. So why is it

not accepted at more vendors/merchants/service

providers and why do more people not use it since it is so

much better?

The answer is simple: Price

A common complaint you may have heard regarding

Bitcoin or cryptocurrencies, in general, is that they are

“too volatile” and thus are not really usable as money.

Indeed, it is a valid concern if your 2 Bitcoins could be

worth a dollar right now and only 10 cents the next

minute. The truth is that such large volatility in value

actually happens for fiat currencies as well! The only

reason we don’t think of fiat as highly volatile is that we

are not exposed to its volatility on a regular basis and it is

in many governments interests to prevent too much price

volatility.

The truth is that fiat currencies are valued against each other, and

against commodities. The most painfully obvious time we experience

fiat currency volatility is when we are overseas on holiday and find

exchange rates at money changers differing from one day to the next!

Sometimes by as much as 10 to 20 percent! Some people, based on

their geographic locations, may also experience fiat price volatility

firsthand. Many nations with large lass mass that enable them to have

an agriculture industry will never experience this, as they are able to

buy produce with local currency and may never ever need to import

certain goods.

If that is insufficient evidence for the volatility of fiat

currencies, take into consideration the Asian Financial

Crisis and the European Sovereign Debt Crisis, both while

not a direct result of fiat volatility, could not have

occurred if the individual currencies of nations or states

did not fluctuate.

So, is Bitcoin really more volatile than fiat? Could you really

use this as “money” if its value changes from second to

second?

The current problem with cryptocurrency is that it is not widely

accepted as a form of exchange today, causing a need to perform an

exchange to fiat in order to obtain liquidity. This creates a situation

where the price of crypto is defined, not relative to the value of the

goods and services it can be exchanged for (as there are few

merchants who accept them currently), but relative to its value in fiat

or other cryptocurrencies it can be traded for. In such a situation, it

becomes extremely volatile as there is no longer an asset to which it is

possible to “peg” its value against, but rather against other volatile

currencies. The end result is that the price volatility in crypto is

amplified by the volatility of all the currencies it can be traded

against. Crypto is not more volatile than fiat, crypto gets its volatility

from fiat.

What is the solution to this problem of crypto volatility in

this case?

It’s simple: the increased adoption of cryptocurrencies

as a form of money by more and more merchants.

While many purists aim to entirely eradicate fiat, this has faced many

roadblocks in the form of regulations and oversight by the same

authorities who have control over fiat. However, crypto does not need

to replace fiat, as long as it is recognised more widely and can be used

in conjunction with fiat to purchase goods and services, the price

volatility of crypto will start to even out.

Another key factor that creates the impression of greater crypto

volatility comes from the fact that there is no central authority

governing the price of cryptocurrencies. With fiat, central banks are

able to control the prices of their currency to a certain extent,

through various mechanisms, by affecting both the demand and the

supply. To keep it short, central banks can choose to control demand

and supply by affecting interest rates, issue of treasury notes or

simply by buying up excess currency in the forex market.

Why would they want to do this? Because that is the entire purpose of

a central bank; to reduce uncertainty in the market. In crypto,

however, we have no central bank to provide a “cushioning” effect in

the case of sharp spikes up or down the price charts. To make matters

worse, cryptocurrency trading literally happens 24/7. There are no

brokers to close on weekends that can close the doors on retail

investors. With trading enable 24/7, you could imagine that it

becomes a lot more volatile.

Conclusion

Well, hopefully first and foremost, I hope I’ve addressed

any fears you’ve had about crypto perhaps from hearing

various statements from banking or finance industry

leaders. Secondly, I hope I’ve given you some insight into

the value proposition of cryptocurrencies over traditional

fiat. And lastly, I hope that you now have a basic

understanding of the technology behind it and why it is

built on real innovation and not a scam or a pyramid

scheme. Personally, I won’t advice you to put your life

savings into crypto as the adoption rate today is not very

high and volatility is truly a concern, but it could be a

good long-term investment

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