5. People for whom fiat money is impractical for one or more reasons
This category is way larger than people in well-banked Western circles realise. Bitcoin (crypto) is one of the easiest ways for people affected by capital controls or sanctions (on the financial institutions they use, or the country they were unlucky enough to be born in) to freely move their (legally earned, and taxed) money across borders.
Since one of the countries with strict capital controls is China, and one of the countries affected by sanctions is Russia, the scale of this usage of crypto is huge.
The idea that some cryptocoin is used by some large but unseen group of people is often talked about but nobody presents the data that show that this group really exists. Is there some real data that shows that this large group actually exists or is it all speculation?
And a large number of cigarette shops and bodegas in the US have lottery tickets. Is there a clear reason why we assume it's for remittances and not for gambling? I know in South Asia for example most of it is indeed for degenerate gambling/"get rich overnight" schemes.
This ought to be a verifiable claim, thanks to Street View. I looked around the airport[0] and in[1] various[2] streets[3]. The images are from last year, but they don’t show cash changers with either tether or BTC logos. I did end up finding one[4] after searching through seven, although it is dedicated to cryptocurrencies (it was next to a cash exchange, it isn't one), and its website states this[5]:
> Is exchanging cryptocurrency legal in Turkey? Yes, it is legal to buy, sell or trade your crypto money as long as crypto money is not used to pay goods or services.
They also mention they only pay out in USD. That makes it sound like the only possible use is for a Russian to convert Rubles to BTC in their home country, exchange BTC with USD there, then go next door to exchange their USD with Lira. That is so heavily tied to sanctions that it can explain why actual cash exchanges don’t support cryptocurrencies.
It’s how I used it. To donate to an Ukrainian streamer many years ago who couldn’t use PayPal and to transfer money easily to my then girlfriend in South Africa (though that got replaced by xe.com later). It was just far easier and cheaper than the alternatives.
Since the Bitcoin supply is capped, the price itself is data about it being used. At present, it will cost you $28,000 to obtain 1 Bitcoin from those of us who value it.
So these people want to avoid law, by avoiding paying taxes or fees of their capital. Which is precisely #2 from the parent poster - "Users who have BC because they need it for illegal gains".
I'm not assigning a moral value to this. I'm just commenting that law avoidance is law avoidance, even if you really really want or need to do it.
Tokens are useless in comparison to monay for almost any activity, except for law avoidance. For this task they are amazing.
Russia is currently fighting a war of aggression, applying controls on the flow of money in or out of there is one way in which the war machine can be starved.
"Aggression" is an objective measure. There is no subjectivity who starts a war and wo is in another country's territory. Those are observable facts.
And obviously Russia did not believe Ukraine to be a threat - or they would have not done this haphazard invasion with too little preparation and too few soldiers, so there is no excuse.
A state can always find a way to hide the transactions, on the other hand
I think the risk of sanctions, means that while there are work arounds, the cost of those work arounds, and the restrictions on who will do business with you, dramatically increase the costs of certain goods.
So sure, the cash moves, but now you pay more. A lot more. Death by 1000 cuts, and all that...
All these categories are like about 5% each, the 80% is normal hard working people who don't like hard working — it is literally hard work! — and to whom crypto gives hope as a magic box in which one throws pennies and dollars come back. It's a bit creepy (the game is in fact zero/negative sum) but then gambling is not generally illegal.
Notably Block, the company in the article enables Bitcoin only, not crypto in general.
> the 80% is normal hard working people who don't like hard working
Another way to look at it is that 80% of Bitcoiners don’t like the value of their hard work to be continuously debased at a rate of 2-8+% year after year or being subjected to the whims of the Fed’s money printer which recently expanded the entire money supply by over 40% then claimed it wouldn’t drive inflation before claiming that inflation was temporary.
1. Bitcoin users who hate the fractional reserve model of banking with fiat or the ability for the Fed to print fiat arbitrarily is probably a majority
2. Hold Bitcoin for illegal uses, probably a small minority as there are better options such as Monero for illegal uses
3. Probably a majority of Bitcoiners are opportunistic investors. Why is that bad?
4. Web3ers, a minority of Bitcoiners. You are thinking of altcoins. (Yes Ordinals on Bitcoin are now a thing and are controversial in the Bitcoin community, but most Bitcoiners are hard money proponents who are not interested in NFTs)
1. Bitcoin (crypto) users who (only) have BC because they hate fiat money
2. Users who have BC because they need it for illegal gains
3. Opportunistic investors
4. Web3ers
I have the unsubstantiated feeling that 1 is overstated.