Post
Topic
Board Economics
Re: Bitcoin is no longer a currency
by
deisik
on 18/03/2017, 16:16:09 UTC
https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/04/bitcoin-is-no-longer-a-currency/274859/

An article from The Atlantic magazine - from 2013, way back in 2013 - declaring that bitcoin is not a currency, but "the ultimate tech stock"!

The four years since the article was written has proven that bitcoin is akin to an Amazon or Facebook (stock, not company), and much less "Pets.com". That's a good thing.

I have to agree with them. Every week that passes without a new company in any local metropolitan area deciding to accept bitcoin as currency is a two weeks further away from bitcoin actually being adopted, mainstream, as a currency.

Bitcoin is an investment. A stock or an asset class/commodity can be debated, although it doesn't much matter. Bitcoin is a store of value not a medium of exchange.

What do you think?

Although I agree with you in most of what you said, I don't agree with you as to buy coin not being a medium of exchange.

But coin is designed to be currency, and it is traded and used like a currency. However the most important aspect of bitcoin is probably it's store of value. It's like the digital gold because production is decentralised and controlled by absolutely nobody

I guess you haven't taken a look at the prices recently

Personally, I don't really think that something can be considered a store of value if its value changes dozens of percentages daily. At best, it can be thought of as a highly speculative (read risky) asset but to call it a store of value seems to be an obvious overstretch. Regarding Bitcoin being used and traded as a currency, this is just another misconception. Even if real fiat like the US dollar gets traded, it basically stops being a currency and turns into yet another financial asset like bonds, derivatives and indexes