Napkin math suggests Bitcoin will perish unless its mining incentives change
Bitcoin's long-term viability is threatened by diminishing mining rewards, with miners needing to sustain $30 million daily. Proposed solutions face challenges, highlighting the urgency for developers to ensure network security.
Read original articleBitcoin faces significant challenges regarding its long-term viability due to its diminishing mining incentives. The cryptocurrency's mining rewards are halved every four years, leading to a projected decline in miner revenue. Currently, miners earn about 3% of their income from transaction fees, which are insufficient to sustain network security as base rewards decrease. Analysts suggest that for Bitcoin to remain secure, miner earnings must maintain a daily revenue of approximately $30 million. This could theoretically be achieved through four scenarios: a continuous rise in Bitcoin's price, a drastic increase in transaction fees, a surge in transaction volume, or a fundamental change in Bitcoin's incentive structure. However, the first scenario requires an unrealistic market cap growth, while the second and third scenarios hinge on unsustainable transaction fee increases and volatility in transaction volume. The fourth scenario, which involves altering Bitcoin's code to stabilize miner rewards, may be necessary but would contradict the cryptocurrency's deflationary principles. The article emphasizes the urgency for Bitcoin's developers to address these issues to ensure the network's future security and functionality.
- Bitcoin's mining rewards are halved every four years, leading to diminishing returns for miners.
- Current miner revenue is primarily from block rewards, with transaction fees contributing only about 3%.
- For Bitcoin to remain secure, miner earnings need to sustain around $30 million daily.
- Proposed solutions to maintain miner revenue face significant challenges and may require altering Bitcoin's core principles.
- The urgency for developers to address these issues is critical for Bitcoin's long-term viability.
So, either we start using bitcoin a lot, generating significant transaction fee revenue to keep miners in, or it's doomed to an inevitable compromise.
So they are attacking bitcoin as a stable store of value, but not necessarily as a currency. Is there a road to 1000x more daily transactions? I don't know. It's currently more like a blue chip stock than a currency or asset.
[1] https://john-tromp.medium.com/a-case-for-using-soft-total-su...
This has always been silly. You can stick gold in a basement and come back 200 years later to find it completely intact. Redeeming bitcoin depends not only on a functioning software ecosystem (imagine trying to run today's software 200 years from now) but also on the mining community continuing to operate forever.
Bitcoin's primary appeal has always been unregulated, online exchange of value.
Correct me if I'm misguided - I'm not an economist, let alone a crypto-economist - I would assume the price of a bitcoin would go up as the mining rewards get fewer and fewer, but with Bitcoin being "tied" in a sense with traditional currencies, I wonder how much of a effect the lowering mining rewards would have compared to other global economic factors.
Is this the kind of event where investors/holders hit critical mass where they start selling off their Bitcoin, leaving a bunch of bag-holders? Or, will the idea of having scarcity keep the currency going? I somewhat understand that the USD was a gold-backed currency before, which I would think (again, not an economist), keep the value of the currency more stable, compared to the system we have now? I'm curious if there's any parallels between the old "gold standard" and limited availability of crypto like Bitcoin.
Very interesting. I've always wanted to play around with crypto stuff but haven't sat down and given it a decent go.
The simplest solution is to wait until the cost of hashing exceeds the value of your transaction by some reasonable factor. I expect that better solutions will come along by soft fork without adverse effect on supply or decentralization.
> they would need to pay ~$37.50 to move them, which would likely cause them to make fewer transactions
Various soft forks to Bitcoin have been proposed that will allow a higher transaction rate. Even without them, people will pay not only $37.50 for a transaction, but even $100 on the busy days. This is because only big transactions will need to happen on layer 1. Smaller transactions can continue on layer 2. Secondly, no, there don't have to be fewer transactions, especially as the technical fixes to the transaction scalability are introduced.
Even so, the transaction fees only delay the inevitable, which is the complete stoppage of miner rewards, so the argument is not without merit. Relying on miners to secure the network seems weird.
And of course if it becomes a real problem, the miners will update the codebase.