As a means of electronic transfer to avoid capital controls, presumably it is then immediately converted to LBP at the natural exchange rate rather than getting the small amount of LBP that the government has decided is the official exchange rate.
In theory someone in a country where their currency value is dropping goes and buys some cryptocurrency and stabilizes the value they own.
But crypto currency isn't some stable value right? Wouldn't the result be that that person who is already in a bad situation now has put their eggs in a sort of cryptocurrency speculation market?
Let alone all the security / liquidity questions.
Is that something vulnerable folks really need / should do?
The wildly speculative price of crypto is a feature of the transition period, not an innate feature of cryptocurrencies.
There are two steady-states of money, both described by the money supply equation PQ = MV from macroecon-101. If everybody uses dollars, Bitcoin is worth nothing and the value of dollars (1/P) = real GDP (Q) / MV, real GDP rises at ~1-3%, velocity of money is roughly constant, and so price levels go up at the ratio of money supply growth / real GDP growth. The same goes for crypto - if everyone uses Bitcoin, the dollar is worth nothing and prices of goods go up based on real GDP / Bitcoin money supply growth, with the value of Bitcoin (in goods, because nobody would be using dollars) as the reciprocal of that. Cryptocurrency inflation is actually a lot more stable than dollar inflation, because the supply of a cryptocurrency is algorithmically baked into the software itself at the time the crypto is launched. Short of forks and competing adoption, you can predict exactly how many Bitcoin there will be (21 million) when the last Bitcoin is mined (2140).
The wild price swings happen because you have two interacting user populations. If say 0.1% of the population uses Bitcoin and then a bunch of news stories come out about crypto that raise awareness to 1%, then you have 10x as many people fighting over the same supply of crypto. That'll drive the price up 10x (actually more, because people tend to hoard rather than sell when the price is growing up). Similarly, if half those people give up and go back to dollars, the price will fall by 50% (actually more, again because of the presence of Bitcoin hoarders).
In the end state, where everybody uses cryptocurrency, the price of crypto in dollars becomes meaningless, because nobody uses dollars anyway. That makes cryptocurrency a funny investment where its true fundamental value is either zero or infinite, and the price you're getting in the spot market at any given time is a reflection of how likely the public at large thinks these two outcomes are.
Unless Cryptocurrency is as easy and safe to get & spend as traditional currency, "everybody uses cryptocurrency" ain't gonna happen. If someone steals from my online bank, I'm insured against loss. If someone steals from my online crypto wallet account, I'm out of luck (and a ton of money).
(insert "it's your fault for trusting other companies with your wallet!" comment from the crypto kiddies here)
Keeping your crypto wallet in off-network storage and having to dig it out to spend money or whatever is the digital equivalent of keeping stacks of cash under your mattress. Does it work for some people? Sure. But don't pretend it's what the average person wants to do.
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 41.2 ms ] threadBut crypto currency isn't some stable value right? Wouldn't the result be that that person who is already in a bad situation now has put their eggs in a sort of cryptocurrency speculation market?
Let alone all the security / liquidity questions.
Is that something vulnerable folks really need / should do?
There are two steady-states of money, both described by the money supply equation PQ = MV from macroecon-101. If everybody uses dollars, Bitcoin is worth nothing and the value of dollars (1/P) = real GDP (Q) / MV, real GDP rises at ~1-3%, velocity of money is roughly constant, and so price levels go up at the ratio of money supply growth / real GDP growth. The same goes for crypto - if everyone uses Bitcoin, the dollar is worth nothing and prices of goods go up based on real GDP / Bitcoin money supply growth, with the value of Bitcoin (in goods, because nobody would be using dollars) as the reciprocal of that. Cryptocurrency inflation is actually a lot more stable than dollar inflation, because the supply of a cryptocurrency is algorithmically baked into the software itself at the time the crypto is launched. Short of forks and competing adoption, you can predict exactly how many Bitcoin there will be (21 million) when the last Bitcoin is mined (2140).
The wild price swings happen because you have two interacting user populations. If say 0.1% of the population uses Bitcoin and then a bunch of news stories come out about crypto that raise awareness to 1%, then you have 10x as many people fighting over the same supply of crypto. That'll drive the price up 10x (actually more, because people tend to hoard rather than sell when the price is growing up). Similarly, if half those people give up and go back to dollars, the price will fall by 50% (actually more, again because of the presence of Bitcoin hoarders).
In the end state, where everybody uses cryptocurrency, the price of crypto in dollars becomes meaningless, because nobody uses dollars anyway. That makes cryptocurrency a funny investment where its true fundamental value is either zero or infinite, and the price you're getting in the spot market at any given time is a reflection of how likely the public at large thinks these two outcomes are.
(insert "it's your fault for trusting other companies with your wallet!" comment from the crypto kiddies here)
Keeping your crypto wallet in off-network storage and having to dig it out to spend money or whatever is the digital equivalent of keeping stacks of cash under your mattress. Does it work for some people? Sure. But don't pretend it's what the average person wants to do.