The goal of burning is to skew the economic model towards being deflationary (current distribution model in bitcoin is geared towards constant supply and is not deflationary [Stop]).
Some Bitcoin already lost "permanently" due to
1. User mistake.
2. Software bug (e.g. pool doesn't claim transaction fee on mined block and generating private key outside valid range).
3. Sending Bitcoin to known burn address.
4. Sending Bitcoin to OP_RETURN output.
IMO such thing will always happen, so your proposal is unnecessary.
Those 'losses/burns' and non-systematic, and more mature wallet software now performs more and more checks to help user not to lose funds due to typo in fee, address, etc. Those non-systematic events are not changing the model to deflationary, they are side effects that just exist (but they do exist, yes).
This proposal is for introducing this into a consensus, making it 'deterministically deflationary', especially when transaction fees would be larger than the block reward.
1. Is there any benefit to an explicitly deflationary currency beyond increasing the wealth of holders? In my view, as a unit of account its value would ideally remain constant. Deflation is no better than inflation.
2. Why is the burn rate variable? Is the intention to discourage a rise in the total hash rate?
3. How would the proposal effect the business of mining? A variable burn rate between 10% and 90% would make it very dificult to predict revenue.
4. The security of the network against 51% attack is determined by the value of the block reward. Burning a portion of the block reward would therefore lower the security. Is that acceptable?
1. Price is subject to supply and demand, we only adjust the demand. If Bitcoin does not make some adjustment, it raises the risk of it to be overrun by some other asset (for example, Eth, don't throw rocks, I know).
2. Burn rate is variable not to punish hash rate that is effective, but it could prevent too much 'horizontal scaling' of inefficient mining.
3. BTC price increase leads to difficulty increase, but as burn would also increase, it would serve as a feedback loop to regulate this. Miners won't get extra profit from BTC price increase, but would continue operate normally. Currently, the fees are less than block reward, and the change would be pretty gradual. The rate boundaries, and even the rules of altering the burn rate are very much open to discussion. More effective mines would earn more.
4. Block subsidy is not burned, this would provide a base for security still for a significant time, if difficulty is lowered, the burn is lowered too. At this current moment, the computational power used for Bitcoin security is so vast, that it is redundant (raising also environmental questions), and even if the difficulty goes lower to some value, it still would be sufficient to ensure the security of the network. The hardware would keep evolving and difficulty would go up because of this factor.
1. Is there any benefit to an explicitly deflationary currency beyond increasing the wealth of holders? In my view, as a unit of account its value would ideally remain constant. Deflation is no better than inflation.
I agree 100% to this.
This is "fee burn" stuff is a shitcoin mentality. People just print billions and billions of coins, then create a mechanism to slowly burn those coins to make them more valuable, trying to pump the value.
Bitcoi doesn't need that. Bitocin value is in its protocol, decentralization and technology. We don't need to burn coins to make it valuable. The stability of basic protocol rules and mining economy is more valuable than that.
This mechanism (using fiscal/monetary measures to regulate supply) was introduced since Austrian school. I would not personally call Ethereum a shitcoin (BSC too, but that has different opinions).
From one point of view a coin with capped supply and deflation is a better store of value than a coin with just capped supply. Bitcoin with deflation could stay attractive as an long-term investment tool for holders having the supply very gradually decrease over time. This would increase probability for Bitcoin to stay as #1 coin. Being on top is important for continued adoption and expansion of Bitcoin.