Sorry for the deleted comment, I just decided shortly after writing it that I don't really have the time today to argue on the internet.
My comment stated that there is no value for user in all the decentralized verification process and just storing transactions in a trusted central database is good enough for most of them.
Your response is more or less completely ignoring this and attacks the current financial system and what not, it does at no point explain why you can not centralize Bitcoin. What prevents doing the exact same thing as the Bitcoin network but with a central server for verification and storage instead of doing it in a distributed way?
One comment almost immediately after the deleted one hardly qualifies as arguing for hours on a subject. And I am of course always free to change my mind and preferences. ;)
No. You got me wrong here. I totally agree that an end user has no value either way, but if the user chooses the centralized way, it gives someone the license to print money, wherein lies the problem.
I agree with you. Inflation is due to political maneuvers, and is not purely economical. In other words, without bad politicians, inflation wouldn't exist.
Say we started with $10,000 and a population of 1,000. Everybody starts with $10. Without inflation and more money being printed how do we handle population growth? Once we hit 1,000,000 citizens either everyone has one penny or a percentage of people go without any money at all.
I guess that's kind of my point. Currently there is no way to divide up a millionth of a penny. Also psychologically I'd rather have $5 than 5/1000 of one.
Also you didn't address my point that rather quickly there would be people with no money. If you did subdivide the pennies I don't see how that's any different than printing more money. It's just what side of the decimal point you want to be on.
Subdividing pennies might be more dangerous actually because presumably you could only do it by a factor of 10. Would we say that on March 31st a dollar is worth 100 pennies but on April 1st its worth 150? Or would we just add another layer of 1000 micro pennies equal one penny? At least with current inflation they can introduce new dollars as they need so inflation is controllable. In your version its not controllable because its mandated by access to the currency itself.
Huh? The dollar would still be worth 100 pennies, it's just that you could also use micropennies (worth 10^-6 pennies) to pay for stuff. The ratio doesn't change, the total amount of dollars / pennies / micropennies doesn't change; micropennies are a convenience that allows us to write "5 up" instead of "0.000005 p".
Yes, this is the only real argument against deflation: people tend to look at the nominal prices instead of the real ones. (See also Mark Twain on the subject in the Yankee at King Arthur's Court.) This is a problem because, as the money increases in value, business would want to decrease the nominal salaries, and people would object to that.
My comment stated that there is no value for user in all the decentralized verification process and just storing transactions in a trusted central database is good enough for most of them.
Your response is more or less completely ignoring this and attacks the current financial system and what not, it does at no point explain why you can not centralize Bitcoin. What prevents doing the exact same thing as the Bitcoin network but with a central server for verification and storage instead of doing it in a distributed way?