Definition
Inflation is the process by which a currency like the dollar or Euro loses value over time,
causing the price of goods to rise. Bitcoin (and some other cryptocurrencies) are designed
to experience predictable and low rates of inflation.
One attribute that has made cryptocurrencies
— particularly Bitcoin — so appealing to investors is the idea that they’re more resistant to
inflation than fiat currencies like the U.S. dollar.
But what is inflation? Inflation is the
process by which currencies lose value over time, causing prices of consumer goods to
increase. Because most economists believe that some level of inflation is good for the
economy, the U.S. government, for instance, has printed more money than consumers actually
need for decades. It’s the reason that a Coke that cost a nickel a half-century ago goes for a
few dollars today.
Bitcoin, on the other hand, has generally
increased in value much faster than the U.S. dollar has lost value — going from
virtually worthless in 2010 to more than $20,000 in late 2020. (Because it’s a volatile
market, Bitcoin has also seen dramatic spikes and declines, but the trendline over time has
been upward.) This has made Bitcoin an increasingly popular hedge against fiat-currency
inflation.
The main way Bitcoin is designed to resist
inflation is that its supply is limited and known, and the creation of new bitcoin will taper
off over time in a predictable way. (There will only ever be 21 million bitcoin, and every
four years the amount of bitcoin that is mined is reduced by half.)
Why is inflation important for crypto?
A high inflation rate for fiat currencies
might lead individuals to invest more in digital money because the dollars or Euros they
placed in a savings account are actually losing value over time. Bitcoin and certain
other cryptocurrencies like Ethereum offer investors an alternative. The economics of the
Bitcoin market are complex, but there are some features designed into the digital currency
that may help it to resist inflation.
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Bitcoin can’t be manipulated by
governments adjusting rewards rates or printing more money to achieve policy goals.
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Like gold and other scarce stores of
value, the conventional wisdom around Bitcoin is that it should rise in price in uncertain
times. (This has not always been the case, however — at the start of the COVID pandemic
for instance, it fell sharply along with the stock market.) It’s also a much more
convenient way to store and transmit value than gold — it can simply be sent over the
internet.
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Scarcity is one key to making a store of
value resistant to inflation. There will never be more than 21 million bitcoin. As of now,
approximately 19 million bitcoin have been mined. Around every ten minutes, miners process
a new “block” and 6.25 bitcoin are added to the network. (In 2024, the mining reward will
drop to 3.125 bitcoin, and will decline by half again every four years until all bitcoin
are mined. This mechanism, which is designed into the Bitcoin protocol, is known as the
halving.)
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This scheduled tapering of new supply
over time makes Bitcoin predictable in unique ways — unlike gold, no new bitcoin can ever
be “discovered.”
Do cryptocurrencies experience inflation?
Yes, technically even Bitcoin experiences
inflation as more of it is mined (as does gold). But because the amount of new bitcoin is
automatically reduced by 50 percent every four years, Bitcoin’s inflation rate will also
decrease.
As a practical matter, as long as Bitcoin’s
purchasing power continues to rise vs. the fiat currencies we tend to compare it to,
Bitcoin’s few-percent annual rate of inflation isn’t a major factor for investors to
consider.
But not all cryptocurrencies are designed
like Bitcoin. For instance, an increasingly popular category of digital money called
stablecoins — many of which are pegged to fiat currencies like the dollar — can be a useful,
low-volatility place to save some money. But if a stablecoin is pegged to a fiat currency,
your investment will be impacted by inflation and could lose value over time as their reserve
currency loses value. (Some stablecoins offer rewards, which could change the value equation —
especially with non-crypto rewards rates hovering around zero.).