When looking for protection against currency debasement, ETH actually stacks up better than BTC in the long run.
Here's why: Bitcoin operates on an inflationary model. Sure, it's programmed to become less inflationary over time, but that's not guaranteed to hold. Transaction fees might keep stalling out, and if that happens, Bitcoin's issuance could either ramp back up or get locked permanently—both scenarios create uncertainty.
The difference matters more than most people realize. Ethereum's approach offers a fundamentally different mechanism. With ETH, deflation isn't just theoretical—it's built into the actual network activity. Every transaction burns fees, creating real downward pressure on supply.
When you're thinking about what actually preserves wealth against monetary degradation, the structural incentives matter. Bitcoin's future supply is contingent on multiple variables that could shift. Ethereum's doesn't rely on those same moving pieces.
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FreeMinter
· 01-14 02:35
Haha, this argument is indeed interesting... but it still feels like armchair strategizing. The real shrinkage is in the coins in my wallet.
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BlockchainWorker
· 01-14 02:24
Laughing out loud, they're starting to hype ETH again... How is BTC's stability so easily overlooked?
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ProtocolRebel
· 01-14 02:22
Nah disagrees. The scarcity of BTC is the key, and the ETH burn mechanism sounds good but is essentially disguised inflation. When the bear market hits and transaction fees collapse, it will still be game over.
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ruggedSoBadLMAO
· 01-14 02:10
NGL, this argument sounds pretty good, but I still have some doubts... ETH's burning mechanism is indeed fierce, but Bitcoin's system has been running for so many years. Can it change just like that?
When looking for protection against currency debasement, ETH actually stacks up better than BTC in the long run.
Here's why: Bitcoin operates on an inflationary model. Sure, it's programmed to become less inflationary over time, but that's not guaranteed to hold. Transaction fees might keep stalling out, and if that happens, Bitcoin's issuance could either ramp back up or get locked permanently—both scenarios create uncertainty.
The difference matters more than most people realize. Ethereum's approach offers a fundamentally different mechanism. With ETH, deflation isn't just theoretical—it's built into the actual network activity. Every transaction burns fees, creating real downward pressure on supply.
When you're thinking about what actually preserves wealth against monetary degradation, the structural incentives matter. Bitcoin's future supply is contingent on multiple variables that could shift. Ethereum's doesn't rely on those same moving pieces.