@Alex
> The person who obtained greater economic utility from their two transactions.

That is not the case. The economic utility gained by their two transactions is probably almost entirely related to something other than bitcoin - the nature of the specific transactions themselves. The value they got from using bitcoin is the value they get from the properties of bitcoin when compared against other competing things in the market (other currencies or payment systems). Bitcoin's ability to finalize quickly, have no counterparty risk, reduced 3rd party middleman fees, and the willingness of that person to transact using bitcoin vs something else, to name a few. 

My example was intended to make it very clear that the person who held bitcoin over 10 years got more value from bitcoin itself, regardless of who received more economic utility from their chosen transactions. 

> Billy appeared to be indicating that the frequent movement of coins in itself somehow produced utility

I was actually saying the opposite of that. My point, and the point of my example I explained above, was that holders gain quite a bit of value from bitcoin, and so bitcoin's value to its users is not derived solely from transacting. 

@Kate
> Pool operators are free to request larger fees from older utxos

You're absolutely right that whoever creates their block template can decide how to include transactions. However, by doing such non-standard things, they would lose money, so they are not incentivized to do that. Keagan's point was about who pays for bitcoin's security. Right now it is only transactors. And yet transactors are not the only actors who gain value from the use of bitcoin. As such, the payment for bitcoin's security is not spread proportionally to those who get value from the use of bitcoin. It would certainly be ideal if bitcoin's security was paid for by each actor proportionally to how much value they get from using bitcoin. Worth it? Questionable. But ideal, certainly. You aren't going to get to that ideal by expecting individual miners to altruistically lose money to enact that ideal.

On Wed, Jun 29, 2022 at 3:44 AM Kate Salazar <mercedes.catherine.salazar@gmail.com> wrote:
Hey

On Tue, Jun 28, 2022 at 10:43 AM Billy Tetrud via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
@Eric
>  People who transact are realizing the benefit of money - the avoidance of barter costs. 

I'm very confident you're incorrect that holders don't receive any benefit and you're certainly not correct that every spend is receiving the same benefit. As I'm sure you're aware, one of the primary components of a currency's value and purpose is as a store of value. Storing value happens while you're holding it, not while you're spending it. Consider the following two scenarios: one person holds onto 10 bitcoin for 10 years and then spends those 10 bitcoins in some way in 2 transactions. Another person spends 4 bitcoins to buy something, then sells it for 6 bitcoins, and then buys something else for that 6 bitcoins and then never acquires any bitcoin for 10 years. 

Both people spent 10 bitcoins over 2 transactions. Over that 10 year period, only one of those people utilized bitcoin's utility as a store of value. Who benefited more from their use of bitcoin? 

> Those who never transact, never realize any benefit.

While that's true, its not relevant and basically a red herring. You need to compare those who transact often and rarely hold, to those who hold a lot but rarely transact. Its not helpful to consider those who throw their bitcoin into a bottomless pit and never retrieve them.

On an idealistic level, I agree with Keagan that it would make sense to have "a balance of fees to that effect". I think doing that would be technically/economically optimal. However, I think there is an enormous benefit to having a cultural aversion to monetary inflation and the consequences of convincing the bitcoin community that inflation is ok could have unintended negative consequences (not to mention how difficult convincing the community would be in the first place). There's also the economic distortion that inflation causes that has a negative effect which should also be considered. The idea of decaying utxo value is interesting to consider, but it would not solve the economic distortion that monetary inflation causes, because that distortion is a result of monetary devaluation (which decaying utxos would be a form of). Then again, maybe in this case the distortion of inflation would actually be a correction - correcting for the externality of benefit received by holders. I'm stream-of-consciousnessing a bit, but anyways, I suspect its not worth the trouble to perfect the distribution of bitcoin blockchain security costs to include holders. Tho, if I were to go back in time and influence how bitcoin was designed, I might advocate for it.

Pool operators are free to request larger fees from older utxos, or from all utxos, or from newer utxos, at their judgement, looking at the blockspace demand census and at what the other pool operators are doing. This is not consensus, it's policy. It's not a technology problem, it's solved above in the social layer.

If this kind of problem torments anyone, maybe miner decentralization hard forks are worth looking at, some already exist.
 

@Peter
> demurrage and inflation have identical economic properties. 

The distortion of incentives is identical, however there is also the effect it has on a currency's property as a useful unit of account. Decaying utxos would mean that it would contribute substantially less to market prices needing to change. I suspect this effect would be bordering on negligible tho. 

On Thu, Jun 23, 2022 at 2:17 PM Peter Todd via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
On Tue, Jun 21, 2022 at 01:00:07PM -0600, Keagan McClelland via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> > The PoW security of Bitcoin benefits all Bitcoin users, proportional to
> the
> value of BTC they hold; if Bitcoin blocks aren't reliably created the value
> of
> *all* BTC goes down. It doesn't make sense for the entire cost of that
> security
> to be paid for on a per-tx basis. And there's a high chance paying for it
> on a
> per-tx basis won't work anyway due to lack of consistent demand.
>
> FWIW I prefer the demurrage route. Having something with finite supply as a
> means of measuring economic activity is unprecedented and I believe deeply
> important. I'm sympathetic to the argument that the security of the chain
> should not be solely the responsibility of transactors. We realize the
> value of money on receipt, hold *and* spend and it would be appropriate for
> there to be a balance of fees to that effect. While inflation may be
> simpler to implement (just chop off the last few halvings), I think it
> would be superior (on the assumption that such a hodl tax was necessary) to
> keep the supply fixed and have people's utxo balances decay, at least at
> the level of the UX.

Demurrage makes protocols like Lightning much more complex, and isn't
compatible with existing implementations. While demurrage could in theory be
implemented in a soft-fork by forcing txs to contain an output with the
demurrage-taxed amount, spending to a pool of future mining fees, I really
don't think it's practical to actually do that.

Anyway, demurrage and inflation have identical economic properties. They're
both a tax on savings. The only difference is the way that tax is implemented.

--
https://petertodd.org 'peter'[:-1]@petertodd.org
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