Bitcoin Q&A: Divisibility and Deflationary Monetary Policy - YouTube

Channel: aantonop

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[AUDIENCE] You have been talking about the need for a bitcoin, which is the demand side.
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What are the plans to grow the supply of bitcoin until it satisfies those 80% of people who are unbanked?
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Because $10 billion in value is less than 1% of 1% of the need.
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[ANDREAS] Bitcoin's monetary policy is very specific. It is designed to simulate precious metals.
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It is a system of restricted supply without fractional reserve; a fully backed currency.
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21 million is the maximum [number of bitcoin] that will ever be created.
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You may hear that and ask, "21 million coins, how can that possibly fit the world economy?"
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The point is, bitcoin is not a traditional currency. Bitcoin is a programmable currency that you can...
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subdivide to eight decimal points, which means there are one hundred million smaller units in every bitcoin.
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One bitcoin has a hundred million satoshis, which is the smallest unit you can have [on-chain].
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We can divide [a bitcoin] even further than that [off-chain], cut it into smaller and smaller pieces.
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If you [look at the supply] in terms of twenty-one quadrillion monetary units,
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that could fit the world economy as it is today, right?
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With the approximate value of one [hundreth] of a dollar per unit, with twenty-one quadrillion units, that would...
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that would give you $210 trillion [worth of bitcoin].
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[AUDIENCE] But if you just decide to cut it up, it would create [the opposite] of inflation.
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[ANDREAS] Well, exactly. If you cut it up, then you will have a deflationary effect.
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If you have a relatively fixed supply and increasing demand, that drives up the price of the currency.
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Deflation is a very scary thing if you are an economist because under traditional economics,
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we have [created] currencies that are fractional reserve.
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What are the conditions under which you have deflation in a fractional reserve currency?
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You have a government that has the ability to [theoretically] create an infinite supply.
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What does it take for the demand [of a currency] to collapse so far below the supply that...
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even an infinite supply creates deflation?
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The answer is simple: a catastrophic collapse in demand; not just a recession, but a depression.
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In systems of money where you can just keep printing supply, inflation is a [more common] problem,
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deflation is not a problem.
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If you can keep printing money, someone will spend it. That is not the problem. Why would no one spend it?
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Because the economy has collapsed completely.
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The only places in the world [we know of now] where we see deflation as a monetary phenomenon...
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are places where you have a catastrophic collapse in demand [for the currency].
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Japan is a great example of that, now in its 20th year of deflation.
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In a few other countries, they first dip into a deflationary period before hyperinflation.
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Everybody keeps their money under their mattress, then there is a slight increase in positive sentiment.
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The money comes out into the market again, and then it [turns into] Weimar Republic.
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[Hundreds of billions of marks] just for a cup of coffee.
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Deflation as a monetary phenomenon is only bad when you have an infinite supply.
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But it is not necessarily bad if the supply is restricted. Let me give you an example of deflation we all like.
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How many people here have a phone that cost the same as the phone they bought ten years ago?
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How many here have a phone that is less expensive, for the same capabilities,
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than the phone they bought ten years ago?
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We all do, right? Ten times more processing power, ten times more memory, than just two years ago. Yes?
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My first cellphone was slightly bigger than this microphone.
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It had eighteen minutes of talk time before the battery would run out.
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I had paid almost 拢1,000 sterling to buy it. Today, this [phone] runs for about twenty hours.
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It has more processing than a thousand of the first supercomputers, and cost me about $600.
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What is that called? Deflation. That is [price] deflation in action.
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My money can buy more product and has more value in the market [than before].
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Deflation is great. With falling prices for laptops and other products, we love it.
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For businesses that are efficient, we love it.
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When deflation is caused by improvements in efficiency and a constrained supply, not by a collapse in demand,
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we love it.
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Deflation is not necessarily a problem. On the other hand, we don't know [the long-term effect].
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In cryptocurrencies, there is a lot of competition in monetary models.
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If you don't like Bitcoin's monetary model, you can find others with different models,
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such as higher levels of inflation.
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The monetary policy [of cryptocurrencies] is a very interesting characteristic to me.
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In a world where every other currency is printed to infinity, [bitcoin] is the only one that isn't.
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That is a good thing, or at least it is a different thing. It is counter-correlated.
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To an investor, something that is counter-correlated is very interesting to have. I can always get...
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inflation-based currencies [elsewhere].
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When you see things like Brexit happen, or sudden devaluations in the yuan, three things go up [in value].
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yen (because it is deflating), gold, and bitcoin.
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Fancy that! That is a weird situation in monetary politics. Everything else is moving in the [opposite] direction.
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The only three things moving [up] are the Japanese yen, gold, and bitcoin.
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But I am not an economist. Again I will disclaim that. I hope I [answered your question].