I do not understand why they chosen this economy model. As an inflation currency people would sell more than buy and hodl, same like current fiat money. Fiat money doesn´t have limited supply and constantly new money being printed into the system. And the result? American dollar has lost around 95% of its value over the past few years.
Exactly. Ethereum's current supply greatly resembles Fiat where every once in a while, new coins are "printed" by the issuer. Maybe developers have chosen Ethereum to be this way in order to reduce costs for interacting with smart contracts? I believe that a higher priced Ethereum would greatly limit the user's level of accessibility into decentralized applications. After all, a fee paid in ETH is required to use (or even deploy) a smart contract on the Blockchain. The classic version of Ethereum (ETC) might have successfully adopted a monetary policy, but that doesn't necessarily mean it'll work on Ethereum too.
By all means, the developers and the community will have the final decision on implementing a hard cap on ETH's supply or leave everything as is. As much as I'd love to use Ethereum as a store of value like Bitcoin, a reduction in supply doesn't seem to be feasible right now. What's important is to keep Ethereum as affordable as possible in order to attract people into decentralized applications. Otherwise, the high prices could scare away people in the mainstream world looking to use smart contracts for their own benefit.
Considering that Ethereum is the home of "decentralized finance" (De-Fi), it'd need to focus more on scalability instead of adopting a new monetary policy which would limit the coin's supply. As long as everyone can use Ethereum without hassles, there should be nothing to worry about.
Guys, you have to understand that price is not everything, higher price os ETH can be bad for smart contracts
You can read some info here:
https://cryptobriefing.com/low-eth-price-ethereum/So it's not all about the price for ETH, it's not a crypto used for payments
Thanks for sharing. I've figured that it's not suitable for ETH to reduce its supply over time, simply because prices will reach astronomical levels like Bitcoin. After that, it'll become extremely difficult for the average person to use decentralized applications for his/her own benefit. The unlimited supply in the ETH blockchain has been implemented by the developers for a very good reason. It's this "uniqueness" that separates Ethereum from Bitcoin and vice versa. As long as ETH is cheap to use, the world's second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap will be able to fulfil its vision of "banking for the unbanked".
Imagine each ETH being worth $20k just like Bitcoin was back in 2017. De-Fi apps like the Compound Protocol and InstaDapp would experience a decline in adoption because of the high fees in terms of USD. Even though Ethereum Classic has adopted a hard cap in supply, it still hasn't experienced an issue in adoption because prices per coin are much lower than Ethereum. But if ETC rises way above $2k per coin, you'd expect smart contracts to charge large amounts of money in terms of USD each time someone interacts with them. In the end, Ethereum will work best as a coin with an infinite supply and PoS for highly-performing and affordable smart contracts for the whole world to use. Just my thoughts