The internet would benefit from a native monetary system that has price stability. I think bitcoin is the natural store of value for the Internet, but bitcoin's fixed supply makes BTC a poor unit of account. As economic conditions change, prices must be updated, which is problematic for transactions where payment is due in the future (i.e., wages, subscriptions, purchases made on credit, etc.).
For this reason, I've been working on a new unit of account that could bring price stability to the Bitcoin economy. This unit of account is entirely opt-in and does not require trusted third parties or changes to the Bitcoin protocol.
Key Ideas
- Bitcoin remains the medium of exchange and store of value in the economy.
- Goods and services are priced in "utils" instead of BTC.
- The number of "utils" per BTC is controlled by an interest rate, set through the relative quantity of two convertible tokens, Tighten and Ease, rather than a central authority.
- The price level in the economy will be relatively stable if the interest rate equals bitcoin's required real rate of return.
- Tighten and Ease live on Bitcoin as a lightweight meta-protocol, akin to the Runes protocol proposed by Casey Rodarmor.
Abstract
A monetary system where the price of money is set directly by the market would be less disposed to asset pricing bubbles and monetary inflation. Many users see Bitcoin as the basis for this monetary system, but Bitcoin's fixed supply makes BTC a poor unit of account. In this paper, we argue that bitcoin's value in real terms is an algorithmic function of the required real rate of return. By estimating this rate, we can create a new unit of BTC, which reflects a consistent amount of value in real terms. We call this unit of account the "util." Monetary policy in the "util" economy is controlled by two tokens, Tighten and Ease. Users convert between them according to a constant sum-of-squares invariant, and the relative quantity determines the nominal risk-free rate in the economy. By pricing Tighten and Ease so that the risk-free rate equals bitcoin's required real rate of return, the market updates the number of "utils" per BTC so that the "util" reflects a consistent amount of value in real terms.
A high-level synopsis of this monetary policy can be found at: https://medium.com/@joshsdoman/rethinking-the-flatcoin-problem-1c700754c0b3