Okay, that will gives us total transaction costs with hardware, electricity, rental, profit and so on in the range 1.5 to 2.0 of the electricity costs which again makes electricity costs a pretty good proxy for transaction costs.
So the remaining question is how the total costs of running the Bitcoin network will evolve with changing transaction volume. Will competition among miners drive up or lower the total costs? Will total costs evolve proportionally to the transaction volume - which I think is important for security - or will they decouple? It would probably be interesting to model the whole system and see what happens. Is there an equilibrium for transaction costs and Bitcoin adoption? And is it stable or will the system run away?
So the remaining question is how the total costs of running the Bitcoin network will evolve with changing transaction volume. Will competition among miners drive up or lower the total costs? Will total costs evolve proportionally to the transaction volume - which I think is important for security - or will they decouple? It would probably be interesting to model the whole system and see what happens. Is there an equilibrium for transaction costs and Bitcoin adoption? And is it stable or will the system run away?