Bitcoin Cash: Inflation-Proof Cash

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2 years ago

In a recently published report, the IMF claims cryptocurrency is too volatile to be considered money, although the same report acknowledges the fact that crypto is used in commerce.

Is volatility an issue, though, or perhaps the real problem is the structured devaluation of fiat caused by centralized entities and massive issuance of new money resulting to high inflation levels?

Fiat money is another mechanism to control the public. While cryptocurrencies are volatile, still some are offering all features money should have and unlike fiat, they don't always devalue over time.

While cryptocurrencies are volatile, the main purpose (of some of them) is to reach mass adoption as means of exchange. And what matters most is the purchasing power.

Even the most stable fiat currencies lost at least 50% of their purchasing power in just the previous two decades, with inflation levels the lowest in modern financial history.

Satoshi Created Sound Cash

Source

Twenty years ago, the internet was still in the beginning, yet it didn’t take many years to achieve mass adoption.

Throwing cash on our screen didn’t seem to do anything. Our banks were failing massively to accommodate e-commerce, and right about 2008, a great recession struck our markets. Banks went down and funds were seized. Trust in a corrupt and unstable centralized financial establishment was also lost.

Satoshi created Bitcoin as a payments network banks would never control. Yet, Satoshi didn’t predict that banks could infiltrate Bitcoin and stall innovation.

In the light of the scalability issues of Bitcoin, a civil war started one that lasted for years and had a detrimental and catastrophic result to BTC as means of exchange.

Even for the absolute “price go up” argument, it would have been better to have Bitcoin as a scalable P2P network able to accommodate billions of users.

This is where BTC failed, and a huge gap in the market was created. Bitcoin moved on with the original intrepretation of the whitepaper in the form of Bitcoin Cash. BTC remained with its destructive tendencies and some vague narrative of challenging gold as a "store of value" asset.

Bitcoin Cash is more than Cash

Bitcoin Cash is the top one in the list of cryptocurrencies with potential for mass adoption.

It covers all the fundamentals of money:

  • A Decentralized,

  • Scalable,

  • Secure & Reliable,

  • Censorship Resistant,

  • Permissionless &

  • Cost-efficient network

  • with Instant Transactions and

  • a fixed supply of 21 million units.

Bitcoin cash features everything paper cash also offers but is not restricted only in physical terms. The fixed supply give strength to Bitcoin Cash and eliminates inflation risk in an economy. The current BCH "supply inflation" is 1.8%, and will keep halving every four years.

Instead of adopting a "hodl" and "number go up" mentality, Bitcoin Cash produced and kept developing the network to perfection.

It is now clear it is the Bitcoin that followed the whitepaper. A scalable, powerful P2P network, ready for mass adoption.

Conclusion

Source

The IMF sounded the alarm for cryptocurrency once again. (link).

The glamorous financial institution once again intimidates crypto investors by calling cryptocurrency a threat to financial stability.

Meanwhile, we all know well, the threat to stability in any economy is the IMF itself, with various interventions supposedly made to stabilize economies, but acting as an intermediary agency to the sell-out of productive parts of troubled economies to tied to IMF private interests, only pushing the economies it was supposed to save to a lower point, lower the population and impoverish nations.

An important argument in the IMF report, though, is this:

“Some emerging markets and developing economies face more immediate and acute risks of currency substitution through crypto assets, the so-called cryptoization.”

We will soon encounter cryptocurrencies used in many economies, with the hot spots being those economies threatened most by financial speculators and those that, while having very little fundamental issues, are going to become the new scapegoat, the next Portugal, Ireland, Greece and Spain.

Bitcoin Cash is money, though, no matter what any economist suggests about cryptocurrency.

It may be volatile, but it rises again. The fiat chart is instead the one that will always decline in value losing purchasing power over the years.

I prefer a currency that will recover and after decreasing for a while, will grow again in purchasing power, rather than any government-controlled fiat, that will only keep losing its value with time.

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Comments

Following you posts has opened my eyes to the value and importance of BCH. You are a darling 😘

$ 0.00
2 years ago

Thanks you so much. You have always be a source of sound knowledge to me as a person in the world of CRYPTOCURRENCY. I pray you will never lose your value.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

I'm new in exploring BCH right now. Though I'm a little bit late knowing about Bch , it's really gives help me in financial matters. Thankyou for sharing your thoughts about this and hoping more learnings about you. God bless you po.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

As for me, I would prefer to keep the currency that gives me hope and I believe that it will recover soon

$ 0.00
2 years ago

A few things I really like about Bch from the article are... 1 it's inflation rate is small, but would also keep halving( I find this extremely cool) 2 Bch functions as money but better since it doesn't have the major problem money has. 3 it not only fixes the problem with money, but also fixes the problem with bitcoin (the bitcoin)!!!! 4 I don't think it can be over hyped that it is decentralized (this is extremely cool to me because I like free will, and having a measure of control over things I'm involved in, and with money, the value is controlled fully by the government and a lot of other factors which I'm in no way a part of).

$ 0.10
2 years ago

I don't even think volatility would be an issue in the ideal situation for Bitcoin Cash. That would be if payments and pricing of products would be done in BCH. Then it would matter little how many dollars you get for one BCH as long as the loaf of bread you want to buy stays the same price. A loaf of bread costing 0,01 BCH is still a loaf of bread costing 0,01 BCH regardless of whether 1 BCH costs $400,- or $4000,-

$ 0.05
2 years ago

The cost of materials will still vary, yet, this will be the only factor, not the government mismanagement of money supply and not corrupted officials. In a fully BCH adopted economy we should be expecting prices to drop, though since intermediaries will be out of the equation and technology advances.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

Yes, that's what I meant to say. The volatility right now is due to the drive of investors and the like to make fiat money through the buying and selling of crypto's, and the machinations of whales and other big money people and institutions. BCH needs to get past that, but once it does the volatility will diminish. And once all the components of a product (work, materials, logistics, and so on) are measured in BCH the price of products will not be influenced by the rise and fall of the BCH against the USD.

Am I making sense?

$ 0.05
2 years ago

Sure but there is a lot to consider, this is a scenario that could have happened with Bitcoin if it scaled, so I don't see it impossible with BCH. In such a scenario this would be as you explained, the fiat value will have no effect on BCH. Fiat may be overinflating, but prices in BCH will be stable. Totally making sense. I also think that any hyperinflating economy can find a stable parallel currency in Bitcoin Cash, today.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

Sounds like my own theory of burgernomics

$ 0.00
2 years ago

I don't expect everyone to agree, although, I'm open to read your thoughts.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

Oh I agree 100% Just pointing out my own foray into the topic months ago https://read.cash/@nomadghada/theory-of-burgernomics-1a2248cc

$ 0.05
2 years ago

Oh, I have read this... and totally forgotten about it! I'm so sorry!

$ 0.00
2 years ago

Hehe, all good bro

$ 0.00
2 years ago

I am reading the Bitcoin Cash white paper.

$ 0.05
2 years ago

Very informative article. Thank you for sharing your thoughts.

$ 0.00
2 years ago

Don't you think all these agencies and bodies trying to take down crypto should be tired by now? I think they are spending more time trying to take down crypto instead of focusing on the devaluation the fiat currency experience every day.

Just as you have said, I prefer keeping a currency that would give me hope of restoring and even surpassing my old value to fiat that keep dropping in value and never have the hope of rising again.

$ 0.10
2 years ago