Forgive me for asking but don't crypto currencies amplify the causes of inflation while mostly benefitting majority shareholders of non-stablecoins?
I'm about to start making good money and have started to think about how to properly set up myself for a hopefully non-DeepImpact future and as much as I liked the original idea of the Bitcoin and the Blockchain, what it resulted in - so it appears to me - is mostly a bunch of schemes amplifying the damaging effects of financial institutions that we have not been able to integrate solutions for yet.
>don't crypto currencies amplify the causes of inflation
How so? Isn't the risk rather that central banks would lose the ability to fight deflation if something like bitcoin were to replace fiat currencies?
In this particular case we're talking about stablecoins though, which are a wholly different beast. I think the potential problems (and benefits) for countries where the local currency is replaced by a dollar linked stablecoin are exactly the same as the problems caused by other forms of dollarisation.
Stablecoins are not a different beast. I'm going to assume they are heavily regulated in the US and Europe now but in the past they were used to amplify speculative bubbles in cypto by operating as unbacked fractional crypto dollars that only received value once a retail investor exchanged their currency for a stablecoin. I will also assume that not every country has enacted regulations that would restrict this kind of behavior and that there are still loopholes that money launderers and scammer can use.
Bitcoin does not reduce the effectiveness of US monetary policy either. It has been described as a hedge against inflationary monetary policy but that is only true of Bitcoin if you only buy below the median trend price and have a long > 2 year time horizon. If you have a 6 month time horizon, then you can only really afford to buy Bitcoin at the bottom and should really be using risk free assets like CDs to hedge against inflation.
Speculative gain in Bitcoin does not make it a hedge against inflation, it makes it a speculative vehicle. As Bitcoin becomes less speculative, I really don't even see it being able to sustain enough interest to be a hedge against anything.
>Bitcoin does not reduce the effectiveness of US monetary policy either.
IF Bitcoin were to replace the dollar (and that was the premise if you look further up in this thread) then by definition US monetary policy would cease to exist and therefore lose its effectiveness.
This has absolutely nothing to do with the price of Bitcoin. It's a structural feature of Bitcoin because governments do not have the power to increase the supply of Bitcoin.
A dollar linked stablecoin on the other hand does not have this structural feature (for the US). This is the difference I'm talking about.
For other countries the situation is quite different because dollarisation in any form (stablecoin or otherwise) means giving up their own monetary policy.
I'm about to start making good money and have started to think about how to properly set up myself for a hopefully non-DeepImpact future and as much as I liked the original idea of the Bitcoin and the Blockchain, what it resulted in - so it appears to me - is mostly a bunch of schemes amplifying the damaging effects of financial institutions that we have not been able to integrate solutions for yet.