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927 points smallerfish | 10 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source | bottom
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portaouflop ◴[] No.42926658[source]
IMF gave them 1.4 billion to abandon the “experiment”:

> The IMF made this a condition for a loan of 1.4 billion US dollars (1.35 billion euros). In December of last year, the IMF reached an agreement with President Nayib Bukele’s government on the loan of the stated amount to strengthen the country’s “fiscal sustainability” and mitigate the “risks associated with Bitcoin,” as it was described.

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I dislike cryptocurrencies as much as the next guy but this was clearly something else than a failure of the currency itself

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dragonwriter ◴[] No.42928058[source]
If you need to go to the IMF for a loan of ~3% of your GDP to mitigate the risks associated with Bitcoin, well, that's a pretty good sign that adopting Bitcoin as legal tender was a pretty disastrous failure.
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willmadden ◴[] No.42928498[source]
What are you talking about? Their Bitcoin holdings more than doubled in value.
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hagbarth ◴[] No.42928708[source]
Would that not be a bad thing when using it as legal tender? Deflation tends to be disastrous for the economy.
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almosthere ◴[] No.42929618[source]
that doesnt hold for a deflationary currency
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troupo ◴[] No.42930016[source]
If the value of your coin only goes up in value, why would you use 1 bitcoin now to buy a pizza slice if you can use it 5-10 years from now to buy a house?
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oneeyedpigeon ◴[] No.42930334[source]
A house in 5-10 years is nice, but it doesn't stop me from starving to death today.
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1. hagbarth ◴[] No.42930377[source]
I think it was just an analogy. The incentives are to defer purchases, if possible, which lower economic activity overall.
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2. oneeyedpigeon ◴[] No.42930394[source]
Sure, my point was that there are many reasons someone might spend money today that might be better off saved for the future, however much it may increase in value.
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3. troupo ◴[] No.42931884[source]
> there are many reasons someone might spend money today

Yes, because that's the value of money. Bitcoin isn't money. It's a speculative asset precisely because people are hoping its value will only go up.

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4. oneeyedpigeon ◴[] No.42933147{3}[source]
I'm speaking from experience. I literally spent Bitcoin last week that I would rather have held, because I needed the money.
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5. troupo ◴[] No.42933511{4}[source]
And yet, en masse Bitcoin is used as speculative investment, not money.
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6. robertlagrant ◴[] No.42934307{3}[source]
> It's a speculative asset precisely because people are hoping its value will only go up.

This is the same for any currency trading.

7. dlubarov ◴[] No.42934485[source]
There are other ways to encourage spending though, like a wealth tax. Not that I necessarily support it, but that would be the more comprehensive solution to hoarding, since it couldn't be worked around by just exchanging fiat for other assets like gold.
8. ◴[] No.42934770{5}[source]
9. fastasucan ◴[] No.42940190[source]
Yes, bur you dont want to limit your populations spending to just those essential items.
10. npoc ◴[] No.42947847{5}[source]
All investments are speculative.