Ask HN: Will banks inflate Bitcoin just like they inflate fiat money?
But what will prevent banks from creating it out of thin air, just like they create Dollars and Euros?
Let's take a look at it in terms of dollars:
Entrepreneur Joe wants to build a business. He goes to a bank and "takes a loan". Which means the bank writes down in their computer "Joe's balance is 100,000 dollar". Then Joe hires Sue. Sue works her ass off for one month and gets "paid" 5000 dollar. Joe tells his bank to "pay" Sue 5000 Dollar. So, the bank writes down in their computer "Joe's balance is 95,000 Dollar. Sue's balance is 5000 Dollar".
The story would work the same, no matter if you replace "Dollar" with "Bitcoin" or "Purple Diamonds" or whatever. The bank's computer does not care how many Bitcoins or Purple Diamonds are out there. It's just an SQL database.
So if Bitcoin become the new currency, soon people would collectively "own" billions of them, right?
Am I missing something?
30 comments
[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 81.4 ms ] threadFirst, what you are describing is closer to Ethereum, which is a payment vehicle that disperses ..not bitcoin. think bitcoin as closer to gold.
You can't "create it" out of thin air. That's what blockchain is all about. Think tiny little receipts that are shared instantly with a million computers. To "create it out of thin air' you would have to hack a million computers at one time and give them all the unique blockchain proof of mining...which is impossible right now.
simply = blockchain technology is what is keeping banks from creating it out of thin air.
Hope that helps
It does not matter, how Bitcoin works.
The bank can tell their customer "Your balance of XYZ is 1000". No matter if XYZ is Dollar, Euro, Rings of Jupiter or Bitcoin. Banks "create" whatever they like out of thin air by just telling their customers that their "balance" is so and so.
That's why Henry Ford said that if people understood the monetary system, there would be a revolution tomorrow.
If this concept is new to you, then google "money is debt" and you are up for a ride.
A bank can't create Bitcoin anymore than I can create dollars. I can create something that I say is dollars, but when I try to use it as dollars no one will accept it.
I can write on a piece of paper that I have 1 million Bitcoin, but I can't transfer it to you anyway. That's the point.
But regular people don't care. It is public knowledge, that M2 is at $21T and the monetary base is only $6T. As long as they can use your bank account to pay your rent and buy ice cream, the money is real for them.
When you sum up the amount of gold people "own", it is a number 10x higher than the amount of gold in existence.
The reason it is 10x and not 100x or 1000x is that Gold is not used as money.
regardless of what VC backed contrivances the future may bring, digital assets will NEVER have intrinsic value. that's the biggest scam ever invented, even more than the "cloud" and "saas".
but banks could just fork the chain, or copy-paste another chain, no shortage of options. that's what everyone else does.
- depends on online connectivity to use something you paid for
- forced version upgrades/general drop in software quality/reliability (enjoy those constant regression to justify that service contract)
- used to be a one-off purchase to purchase physical software, now you have the benefit of a recurring subscription to own nothing.
- loss of resale value. you can sell your old used games/software - or even sell the activation keys (after use).
You seem to be missing some basic things about how Bitcoin works. It's a network, and a majority of the network has to agree on any changes. You can't change it unilaterally. There's no mechanism for banks to issue Bitcoin.
To answer your question, yes! People are doing that today, with Bitcoin and other coins. That is a large park of what was going on inside the defi ecosystem.
It gets fairly interesting because you see the exact same problems there you saw in the early days of banks.
1. People deposit bitcoin (10 million) and dollars into the "bank". Inside the bank, they trade the dollars for made up bitcoin. Now the bank books show 30 million bitcoin on people's accounts. People begin withdrawing the bitcoin. Because the bank controls 10 million of actual bitcoin, only the first 10 million can be withdrawn, everyone else is not going to be able to withdraw their bitcoin. This creates a run on the bank effect.
2. The bank has (10 million) bitcoin, and it wants to lend out lots of made up bitcoin. The first 10 million that it loans out can be sent using the bitcoin that it has. After that it has no more actual bitcoin. It can't send any more bitcoin out, so it can't lend out any more than that. You would be pretty mad if you had a loan that you were paying interest on that was stuck in your bank and you couldn't spend.
3. Fine, the bank says. We'll have bitcoin that you can only spend inside our bank, can only trade to and from dollars inside our bank. Then we can do whatever we want! So the bank lets people buy bitcoin on their accounts inside their system for dollars. The bank doesn't even inflate the bitcoin holdings. Then the price of bitcoin goes from $20,000 to $60,000, and people start selling it back to the bank for dollars. Now the bank is loosing $40,000 for every bitcoin that it virtually held for users.
Doing the virtual bitcoin thing usually results in collapse of company doing it.
Tether is a stablecoin that was supposed to be 100% backed by USD, but there were a lot of doubts about this, lack of transparency on the backing and they did break the peg briefly. Now since tether can be used to buy Bitcoin, this indirectly inflated the price of Bitcoin as well. All of this and more already has happened in DeFi.
The problem is as long as you can use any currency X to buy Bitcoin, simply printing X and using it to buy Bitcoin will inflate the price of Bitcoin as well.
Even in a world of only cryptocurrency, lending money indiscriminately can inflate the amount of Bitcoin that is available to spend. Even if there are only 21M bitcoins but people collectively believe they have access to say 25M due to lending or investing, the same thing happens. What if the bitcoins are invested in a company whose market value crashes because of changing expectations? Just like today, people's net worth craters.
After a lot of reading and thinking I reached the same conclusion. Inflation, bad lending, leverage, bank runs, crashes etc. are all inherent risks of any financial system whatsoever because they reflect deeper truths about human nature. No currency can fix that.
That's a tautology.
If you print dollars, you'd inflate the BTC price because dollars are less valuable, so the BTC/USD exchange price will increase. In a vacuum, with no other variables, Bitcoin's value by itself has remained unchanged.
This is why in theory Bitcoin is seen as an inflation hedge (though not in practice for a ton of reasons). If dollars get inflated, Bitcoin rises compared to the dollar.
The market is always relative to something else.
It works pretty well, as long as people trust the banking system. When people lose trust in the system, they all take their money out at once. So you get bank runs, and everybody gets screwed. It happened a lot in the 19th century -- they called them "panics".
With a fiat currency, the central bank can mitigate the disasters by printing more dollars and loaning them to the banks. Because of that, people don't worry as much about their bank, so the runs don't happen in the first place.
So if we waved a magic wand and replaced dollars with any fixed currency, you'd still get inflation. The money supply M0 would be fixed, but the M1, M2, etc. currencies would inflate exactly the way they always have. Only with greater opportunities for bank panics.
In the meantime, cryptocurrencies are very inflationary. Any one cryptocurrency is fixed, but cryptos as a whole are minted freely. So unless one used a fiat to ban all but a fixed number of cryptos, you get inflation anyway. The only thing preventing that from crashing was a continuous influx of new people trying to buy cryptos with dollars, often misled by fraudulent transactions making them seem viable. Once that crashed, you got a "bank run" on cryptos.
So we again watch as the crypto fans recreate 20th century economics on fast-forward.
This is the US' plan to outrun this depression, based on recent cryptocurrency related legislation. Change my view.
The recent cryptocurrency legislation is mostly about trying to get existing securities laws to cover crypto. They spent a century playing whack-a-mole with various scams, frauds, etc. on other things that people invest in. That's always the way: they codify one scheme as illegal, then people find a way to subvert it, repeat.
I don't think they care one way or another about the current recession. (It's unlikely to be a depression, though it's not impossible.) I'm sure they'd be just as happy to be able to get their inch of green from all those crypto transactions going on, but they're a lot more concerned about supply-side issues (oil, chips, gas, grain from Ukraine) than monetary issues.
(There are also monetary issues, and they should have tackled them at least five years ago. But they're handling those in the conventional fashion, and it seems to be working in the conventional way, if very belatedly.)
The problem with this kind of "mitigation of disasters" is: in the end it rewards the banks that siphoned away more money through reckless risk assessments than others by bailing them out with state money, so everyone else's money.
If you set up such a reward system you get exactly the shitty financial sector that led to GFC 2008.
> The money supply M0 would be fixed, but the M1, M2, etc. currencies would inflate exactly the way they always have. Only with greater opportunities for bank panics.
I think this is short sighted. Letting people access the M0 pool and putting their savings in it and transacting in it means that risk aversive people use it more. And come some crash, they'll be rewarded for it (by not being as much caught up in it as others). So there's incentive to do so. People who accept more risk would make their bets in the M1/M2 pools and sometimes get burned. Assuming the state weren't able to take hold of people's M0 funds, in the case of some crash, it could only shuffle around the M1/M2 funds amoung those who played riskier there, and they'd maybe learn a lesson.
This way the whole system could settle at some more or less stable dynamic equilibrium (where the financial sector cannot just rely on getting bailed out out of everyone's pockets) with some people holding mostly M0 (never loosing their funds) and some doing risky stuff with M1/M2 and sometimes loosing some funds because of insolvencies.
> So we again watch as the crypto fans recreate 20th century economics on fast-forward.
The senctence sounds nice. But now that Bitcoin exists, the situation now is only comparable to back then to a certain degree.
If you invent Bitcoin out of thin air in your MySQL database, you can't transfer them to another Bitcoin address because they don't exist on the blockchain. How are people in these comments say "yes it's possible"?
It is not. That's the bloody point of Bitcoin that these kind of monetary games are impossible (meaning extremely hard and energy intensive to be considered impossible with current technology).
There's no genuine need to ever send Bitcoin to a bank for safekeeping. It safely exists in the blockchain so long as you have your keys. And unlike other types of assets, you don't need a bank to transact with Bitcoin.
You absolutely need some kind of secure vault to safely transact in large quantities of gold.
You absolutely need some kind of secure vault to safely transact in large quantities of physical cash.
You absolutely need some kind of processor to handle checks.
You absolutely need some kind of processor to handle credit cards and wiring money around.
But with Bitcoin, everything exists in a blockchain. You just need to hang onto your keys to perform the main function that a bank performs. (And with smart contracts and the like, you should be able to use assets like Bitcoin as collateral for many kinds of loans as well)
Banks are largely no longer needed in the future if crypto ever achieves real widespread usage and develops as it should. No wonder there's so much derision directed against it by authoritarians who crave control over others' lives.
That's ignoring the fact that you couldn't use any of the "BTC" the bank gave you (outside of their own centralized network) if they don't own any of it in an actual wallet.
Your understanding of BTC and how a bank works is extremely weak.
New bitcoins are generated at a fixed, hardcoded rate. First off, the software can't be changed to emit Bitcoins at a different rate just because banks might want to.
And if the software is changed to emit Bitcoins at a different rate, Bitcoin owners will say "Hey, this changes the rules, it's not fair, I'm leaving." They'll sell their Bitcoins and buy some other cryptocurrency that didn't change the rules.
With banks you can't say "this isn't fair, I'm leaving." With cryptocurrency you can.
OP writes about banks handing out Bitcoins that don't exist on the blockchain but only in the banks' databases. So the subject of mining is mostly irrelevant here.
As long as people trust them, banks can very well inflate Bitcoin.