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Author Topic: If anyone can mine how does inflation not occur?  (Read 1018 times)
globo36 (OP)
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January 23, 2014, 11:33:23 AM
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Hello, If anyone can mine how does inflation not occur?
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Rannasha
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January 23, 2014, 11:40:34 AM
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Hello, If anyone can mine how does inflation not occur?

The amount of Bitcoin available through mining is limited and the rate at which an individual miner gains coins goes down as more miners join the network.

While the amount of available coins is currently increasing (you could call this inflation), it happens at a controlled pace and this pace is slowing down until it stops at the cap of 21 million coins.
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January 23, 2014, 11:40:59 AM
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Hello, If anyone can mine how does inflation not occur?

Basically, there is a constant mining reward per block (halved every 4 years), and the mining difficulty is adjusted by the network so that there are approximately 6 blocks per hour found. So adding mining power just redistributes the total mining results a little bit.

Have you read the FAQ? You really should do that.

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January 23, 2014, 12:05:56 PM
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Bitcoin is often described as deflationary.

However, right now the inflation rate is about 10% per year.
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January 23, 2014, 12:19:31 PM
 #5

Bitcoin is often described as deflationary.

However, right now the inflation rate is about 10% per year.

What do you mean by that?
cr1776
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January 23, 2014, 12:26:13 PM
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Bitcoin is often described as deflationary.

However, right now the inflation rate is about 10% per year.

What do you mean by that?

With the block subsidy being 25 BTC/block and the number of bitcoins already mined around 12.2 million, the growth in the number of available bitcoins causes a roughly 10% per year inflation rate. This decreases each year due to the ratio changing and then of course at the next block subsidy halving in about 2.5 years now.
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January 23, 2014, 12:34:41 PM
 #7

Bitcoin is often described as deflationary.

However, right now the inflation rate is about 10% per year.

What do you mean by that?

With the block subsidy being 25 BTC/block and the number of bitcoins already mined around 12.2 million, the growth in the number of available bitcoins causes a roughly 10% per year inflation rate. This decreases each year due to the ratio changing and then of course at the next block subsidy halving in about 2.5 years now.

So you are saying there are 10% more coins in circulation than last year? If so, that's "money supply" not inflation.

Also, not all coins mined are in circulation. Some are lost permently. And some are in possession of FBI for example Smiley
Barek
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January 23, 2014, 12:41:57 PM
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So you are saying there are 10% more coins in circulation than last year? If so, that's "money supply" not inflation.

Also, not all coins mined are in circulation. Some are lost permently. And some are in possession of FBI for example Smiley

Fair enough. I suppose it is nonsense to use inflation or deflation when talking about Bitcoin. There are too many factors besides the money supply that influence that.
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January 23, 2014, 12:51:48 PM
 #9

Everyday some coins get lost, and after 2016 you will look back on this and ask yourself, why didn't I do more research before asking nonsense.
There is a difference between money supply and inflation.

"The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks"
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prezbo
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January 23, 2014, 12:52:14 PM
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So you are saying there are 10% more coins in circulation than last year? If so, that's "money supply" not inflation.
Also called monetary inflation.
cr1776
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January 23, 2014, 12:56:36 PM
 #11

Bitcoin is often described as deflationary.

However, right now the inflation rate is about 10% per year.

What do you mean by that?

With the block subsidy being 25 BTC/block and the number of bitcoins already mined around 12.2 million, the growth in the number of available bitcoins causes a roughly 10% per year inflation rate. This decreases each year due to the ratio changing and then of course at the next block subsidy halving in about 2.5 years now.

So you are saying there are 10% more coins in circulation than last year? If so, that's "money supply" not inflation.

Also, not all coins mined are in circulation. Some are lost permently. And some are in possession of FBI for example Smiley

I'm not saying that, merely explaining the argument. :-)
empoweoqwj
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January 23, 2014, 01:18:44 PM
 #12

Bitcoin is often described as deflationary.

However, right now the inflation rate is about 10% per year.

What do you mean by that?

With the block subsidy being 25 BTC/block and the number of bitcoins already mined around 12.2 million, the growth in the number of available bitcoins causes a roughly 10% per year inflation rate. This decreases each year due to the ratio changing and then of course at the next block subsidy halving in about 2.5 years now.

So you are saying there are 10% more coins in circulation than last year? If so, that's "money supply" not inflation.

Also, not all coins mined are in circulation. Some are lost permently. And some are in possession of FBI for example Smiley

I'm not saying that, merely explaining the argument. :-)

Cool, no problem. The "argument" was in need of explaining. Thx :-)
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