Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Scarcity doesn't always mean value
by
earnadoge
on 02/09/2018, 02:37:52 UTC
I've recently read a couple of posts here, and it became clear that people don't quite understand what ultimately determines the price of an asset or resource. Many seem to intuitively think that being scarce is enough for being valuable and pricey, or even equal to being valuable and pricey. This may or may not be true depending on another factor which is always at play here.

And this second factor is called utility. These two fundamental factors determine the price of an asset, but none of them taken separately can say anything about the likely price of an asset. Neither scarcity nor utility can determine the price on their own. It is their balance that leads to a price discovery through market means. For example, an asset can be as scarce as hen's teeth, but it still might be worthless. How come? Because being scarce is nowhere near enough to be valuable. To have a price, an asset should also have or provide utility.

In this case, utility means usefulness for achieving certain ends, whatever those can be. If something is scarce but lacks utility, it won't have any value because it is not useful for anything. But utility without scarcity is also pretty much useless for receiving a price tag. For example, the air we breath has absolute utility, without it we would die within minutes. But it has no price tag because it lacks scarcity. It is abundant, so having more of it (so-called marginal utility) doesn't add anything to our well-being as well as wealth.

Technically speaking clean air has a price, clean air emissions policies in north america for vehicles are costing user lots of money, and were shown to improve air quality.  Apparently in some larger cities in China air is so bad they have clean air stations, where you pay to breath fresh air.  While other wear filtered masks, which also need to be purchased.  Yes I know it was just an example, but even an example off top of our head to demonstrate something with zero scarcity, like air, is still not truly scarcity free, and has lots of hidden costs.