Duke of Marmalade
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Ah Wolfie let's dig a rabbit hole. Maybe @tecate will stay out, she is well occupied on the Eastern Front fighting @Dublinbay12Its hardly an endorsement of your position, is it?
I can recall an almost complete absence of endorsement from mainstream economic thinking for economic crash in 2008. Anything from "The Best Is Yet To Come" to "Soft-landing" was about as insightful as it got. Those not on the mainstream thinking were often dismissed as cranks and cribbers.
The difference between that and an economist view on bitcoin is that the property bubble, and subsequent fall-out, is the bread-and-butter of economists. Not some new technology like blockchain.
If the mainstream economists cannot even get close on their predictions for bread-and-butter issues like a property bubble, then what hope something like bitcoin?
Krugmans call for a property bubble
Joseph E Stiglitz: An economist in Freefall
Now don't get me wrong, I have a lot of time for the venerable Krugman and Stiglitz. I'm just open in the knowledge that, like most economists when predicting the future, are prone to absolute howlers. Given the nature of their field, and its infinite variabilities that is quite understandable.
Notwithstanding that they could be correct on bitcoin (their record to date is pretty lamentable), it is a wonder why so much value is stored in their opinions on bitcoin?
I'm no great fan of the economics profession and I agree they have a very mixed record at accurately predicting economic outcomes. But that is not really at stake here. Bitcoin and other currencies purport to have value even though they patently do not have any intrinsic value. I find it intriguing how easily people can buy into this concept. They swallow the argument that their fiat has no intrinsic value, so what is the difference, and then they get easily persuaded by the scarcity argument.
Let's face it a store of value or medium of exchange that actually has no intrinsic value is quite a leap of faith for the human mind, and I am sure a few breaths were held when there was the official break with the Gold Standard. Without being an historian I bet that that move was hotly disputed by the economics profession of the time and probably in the end had mainstream consensus.
There seems to me a complete absence of any such debate on crypto in mainstream economic circles. They obviously believe the comparison between fiat's lack of intrinsic value and cryptos' is totally irrelevant. I myself see no comparison at all, fiat's value is supported by a whole institutional, cultural and economic edifice and yes by Central Banks entrusted to maintain its value - but hey that is a rabbit hole.
The reason I brought it up again is that @Dublinbay12 drew my attention to the absence of any real institutional support for bitcoin. Against the zeitgeist of the times I for one still trust the experts.