The Role of Cryptocurrency: Disruption Is Always Deflationary
How do you grow an economy in a deflationary environment?
This is something that few consider since we tend to not encounter them too often. In the West, we overlook much of what is going on in the rest of the world. This is a mistake that causes people to miss the major lesson of the last 20 years.
Japan was in a deflationary spiral since their collapse in the late 1980s. Once the game was up, things took a turn down and never looked back. The "lost decade" became three as the nation suffered through deflation for basically 30 years. It was only the supply chain shocks due to locking the global economy down that altered the path, albeit only on a temporary basis.
It is also a lesson in quantitative easing. While many think of this as "money printing" and causing the price of assets (along with goods) to increase, explain Japan. They started the process 2 decades ago and Tokyo real estate, the most populated city in the world, is still below it high by a good 20%.
In reality, QE is nothing but a central bank propaganda and shell game that keeps them relevant. They are battling a number of issues, one of which is technology. This is why the idea of global hyperinflation is ridiculous. We are dealing with the exact opposite, something overlooked by the media.
Ultimately, disruption is deflationary. This is true throughout history. Anyone who looks at the different sectors over the last 40 years, point to one disrupted by technology and notice the prices.
Entertainment And Web3
We engaged in a great deal of discussion regarding Web3. This is a prime area where disruption is going to obliterate what is taking place.
Nobody can deny that media companies are enormous. If we look at broadcast networks, movie studios, and streaming services, we realize that trillions in market capitalization is at risk. If we concentrate our focus upon the video arena, we can see how this makes up a majority of the value.
This means that we have a couple things taking place.
The first is many presume these entities are untouchable. I believe we are looking at a different scenario where they are coming under enormous attack. Video is overpriced in comparison to other media formats, meaning we might have a bubble anyway. Couple that with the idea that content creation is going to get easier, along with less expensive, and we can see how new entities will enter the market.
Another thing we are going to see is that value distributed in a much different manner. We know what was once held by Blockbuster is now tied up in Netflix and other streaming services.
This, naturally, is just one area of entertainment. Consider what will happen with gaming, software development, and a host of other industries. With the progress we are seeing with artificial intelligence, it will be a completely different world in a decade.
That said, how does this figure into cryptocurrency?
Deflation Can Be Bad
Deflation can be a wrecking ball.
A statement like this catches many by surprise since they believe that inflation bad, deflation good. After all, prices coming down is a good thing?
That is an odd statement. How many people like when the value of their stocks drop? Are people happy when home prices go down? If buying, yes. However, how many people want to sell a house and write a check out for $25K at closing?
People say they want prices to go down but then they complain when they do. Of course, they often mean the price of goods and services, not assets.
We also have to look at wages. Are people happy when they get their salaries cut? Does someone want to be paid 5% less then year as compared to last? The answer is rather obvious.
Even worse, do people want to be laid off when revenues for a company decline?
All of these happen during deflationary periods. If extreme enough, it can mirror the Great Depression.
Therefore, never believe that inflation bad, deflation good. The simple math tells you that deflation can be a bear of its own nature.
Technological Deflation
When an economy is disrupted like many expect due to the technology, that has a catastrophic impact. When people talk about demonetization, that is deflation. While it is good for prices to go down when purchasing, this has an impact upon the companies, especially the workers.
Technological deflation, on a wide scale, means that money is going to be in short supply. Here is where I firmly believe cryptocurrency will enter the picture. As people loose their jobs, the impact across the economy is obvious.
Unfortunately, the political establishment doesn't understand how things work. Even if they did, it is too slow to move for any positive impact. Technology appears to be accelerating, with the tentacles spreading.
What happens when billions in revenue is wiped out of the video industry due to technology? Just consider what the impact will be on the people who are working in that field? Do you think most of them will be retained and have expanding salaries? Not likely.
Here is one of the first areas we could see Web3 have an impact. We know social video, i.e. YouTube, is enormous. Consider all the hours of video that is watched on that platform. Who is that taking away from?
Of course, we cannot presume that YouTube will continue uninterrupted. There are other options arising which could be a threat, especially if tied to tokenization.
This is a prime example of how cryptocurrency is going to alter the pathway of an industry. Content creation is going to be in the hands of the masses due to technology. Constructing a digital platform to deliver the content isn't that difficult as we see. Changes in file storage is underway. Finally, add in tokenization and we see a monetary component that can offset the deflation created by technology.
The difference is this actually puts money into people's hands.
Posted Using InLeo Alpha
Technology drives a new way forward and with some catalystic changes as such AI annexation into the process of entertainment and economic sectors, some of the backdated methods start to lose value, thats normal.
More of the things are happening round the world but I am apprehended whether the conventional system would have to take a nee form and people finding problems to adjust to the new fields with it .
But time will say well, I guess.
A lot of convergence taking place.
We have crypto, AI, telecommunications, and enhanced computing all moving forward.
This sounds like a classroom lecture delivered by an economic prof. Your analysis on deflation really got me. People say they want the prices of things to go down, but no one is ever happy when that happens. The truth is that deflation is even worse than inflation in some senses.
Great read here.
You do realize I went to school for economics and have a very low opinion of economists.
I agree with a lot of points, but I think there was a problem with your argument in the "Deflation can be bad" part. You used stocks and houses as examples, and their prices going down. Deflation does not equal decrease in price. In stocks, there are instances where the circulating number is doubled [inflation] and the prices drop. In that regard, if ever the circulating supply is reduced [taken by the company/combined; deflation] prices will increase. The same goes for houses. I think inflation and deflation works similar to the population. Inflation of houses, means there are more houses, and deflation means there are less houses available. More houses means more supply, less houses, means less supply. So in the usual law of supply demand, deflation here would cause the price to increase. There can also be that with less houses, each house will take up more land space, thus increasing the price.
As for the other parts, I fully agree that crypto can be a massive disruption to the status quo. We who started a bit earlier need to position ourselves to the industry that we want to focus on. When the mass adoption happens, hopefully we can earn the fruits of our choices.
And there are instances when the companies announce the selling of more stock and prices go up. Have you ever seen what happens when they announce stock splits, doubling the number of shares.
We also see the same on the reverse when reverse splits are announced.
So I still stand by what I said. Yes inflation is technical an expansion of the money supply but most people do not look the conversation in that light.
I guess that's fair. I personally haven't seen stock prices go up after a split or dilution. But that would explain your sentiment.
Deflation can really be bad at times and can actually affect the economy of the project. But I don't think Cryptocurrency is affected or will be affected by deflation
Lol
That’s how humans like to think. One minute we want something so bad and the next minute we don’t!
I think when it comes to the economy of today, many are yet to understand the secret behind value and it’s only companies that are moving towards technological advancements and innovations that are able to get the concept of monetization.
The fact that many want food prices to be cheap means we should also be able to create more food in surplus and that will bring it down. But for businesses that deal in importing and exporting of food, their business would have to take a dive down as the scarcity that helps foster more profit isn’t here as a catalyst anymore.
I’m trying to get the whole concept here myself but I guess ii have to dive deep into this more. However everyone positioning himself in the tech and tokenized area of the ever changing world of today would surely be able to secure themselves when others are screaming from massive layoffs with no way to get more value.