So, I asked (this question)[#1015805] a while back, and could get an answer. Since then I thought and read a bit about it. And this is a hypothesis (which may be incorrect, or may be obvious to some).
As the block subsidies are independent of the number of miners (hence, the rate of new bitcoin production), more miners mean globally more energy spent mining each block, hence it raises the production cost of Bitcoin?
Do miners sell their Bitcoin to the exchanges or use the coins to buy stuff? Does higher production cost (measured in energy) mean the miners will command a higher fiat price, ceteris paribus? I am curious how does the economics of it works, and how the supply side influences Bitcoin pricing.