A recent experiment by a Forbes reporter offers a practical look at what it really means to live on bitcoin. Over the course of a week, she tracked every purchase in a detailed ledger, logging both the bitcoin spent and its U.S. dollar value at the time of each transaction. While the exercise highlighted the growing acceptance of cryptocurrency for everyday payments, it also exposed a less discussed challenge: volatility. Unlike traditional currencies, bitcoin behaves more like a foreign currency, with values that shift constantly. That creates an added layer of uncertainty for users, one that could complicate its path toward mainstream adoption.
Recently, a Forbes reporter tried living using nothing but bitcoin for payments for a week. She published a spreadsheet that showed her spending and the U.S. dollar equivalents for each purchase.
From Forbes:
A few readers asked if I would provide the (very convoluted) ledger from my week of living on Bitcoin. Here is the accounting, including how I spent my Bitcoin and the value of that Bitcoin in U.S. dollars at the time I spent it. You’ll see the week was not just an exercise in living on Bitcoin but an exercise in living frugally (except for the 59 Bittycoins/$56 USD spent on cupcakes).
What the spreadsheet reveals, and what hasn’t been discussed in much of the coverage of bitcoin is that using bitcoin means operating in a foreign currency no matter where you go. Unless the entire world switches to bitcoin, there will always be a foreign exchange risk with bitcoin that can’t be avoided. Someone operating in a local currency does not need to worry about how much their money is worth moment to moment, but this will be a perpetual issue for any secondary currency and may ultimately be what hampers its adoption.
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