To be fair, before publishing I thought this currency could be implemented in a real world environment with less improbability. My current main doubt is “how can the market cap be so volatile with a stable GDP, and would they be closer to each other in a more adequate equilibrium?”. And I’ve basically switched to “okay oops, but under what conditions could this theoretically work, if could at all, and could you imagine better theoretical peak conditions?” mode. Deflation seems like a reasonable danger, I just can’t see how it could be avoided if everyone used market fractions at least to store their money if not to exchange. Because, like, you don’t introduce a random money-making machine into the system to solve your psychological problems at the cost of 2% of your money, there’s no place for it, so I’m guessing that people would adapt to that, and there’s a fictional example of dath ilan that such adaptation is real.
Ok fair. I was assuming real world conditions rather than the ideal of Dath Ilan. Sorry for the confusion.
To be fair, before publishing I thought this currency could be implemented in a real world environment with less improbability. My current main doubt is “how can the market cap be so volatile with a stable GDP, and would they be closer to each other in a more adequate equilibrium?”. And I’ve basically switched to “okay oops, but under what conditions could this theoretically work, if could at all, and could you imagine better theoretical peak conditions?” mode. Deflation seems like a reasonable danger, I just can’t see how it could be avoided if everyone used market fractions at least to store their money if not to exchange. Because, like, you don’t introduce a random money-making machine into the system to solve your psychological problems at the cost of 2% of your money, there’s no place for it, so I’m guessing that people would adapt to that, and there’s a fictional example of dath ilan that such adaptation is real.