Are the long term goals of crypto-enthusiasts for crypto to completely replace fiat currency?
I can’t imagine a world without fiat currency, for the simple reason that governments operate in a deficit. A world without fiat currency would imply that all government workers are paid with crypto, all roads are funded with crypto, the military is funded with crypto, etc. And since this currency is limited and deflationary, this would imply that the only people who can fund these governments are the crypto whales. This sounds like a dystopian nightmare.
Further, it seems obvious to me that many of the decisions made by the Ethereum community are only intended to benefit wealth hoarders and early investors (PoS and the deflationary aspect). Their decisions don’t seem to have the larger global community in mind, at least in an authentic way. They seem to see it, simply, as a store of value.
It doesn't mean that governments are going to be funded by crypto whales, it just means that government spending will be kept on check and limited by the amount of money they can tax from people.
Politicians not being able to fund wars using a money printer is a good thing, not bad.
> it just means that government spending will be kept on check and limited by the amount of money they can tax from people
Governments can borrow money with or without fiat currency, so I don't know where you got the idea that a crypto-currency would stop governments from borrowing.
The difference is that without fiat currency, the government can't inflate it's currency to pay off the debts. At the very least it means that the population does not have the risk of their savings becoming worthless anymore, and it probably also disincentives the lender to give money for such purposes.
If anything, the inability to print money would make governments more dependent on borrowing, since the ability to print your own money eliminates the need for borrowing.
Different people have different preferences with regards to the level of government spending. In general, the actual level of spending will be some sort of average of society's preferences. You, as an individual, will have a hard time imposing your individual preferences about government spending on the rest of society, and "crypto" is not gonna help you achieve that goal in any way shape or form. That doesn't mean to say government spending is unconstrained. Of course, it's constrained, by the government's ability to tax and to borrow, but generally not by its ability to print money. If governments were to lose their ability to tax, we would end up with a bunch failed states, which is a considerably worse situation than having "bloated" governments. And their ability to borrow depends on their creditworthiness. To me nothing suggests that crypto-currencies can have any impact in any of this, to be honest.
I agree that it is unlikely that cryptocurrency replaces fiat currency entirely. What is more likely is a return to fiat money backed by an asset. A Bitcoin standard as opposed to the (relatively) recently abandoned gold standard.
Fiat currency as the world is experiencing it now is just as grand and uncharted of an experiment as Bitcoin.
I can’t imagine a world without fiat currency, for the simple reason that governments operate in a deficit. A world without fiat currency would imply that all government workers are paid with crypto, all roads are funded with crypto, the military is funded with crypto, etc. And since this currency is limited and deflationary, this would imply that the only people who can fund these governments are the crypto whales. This sounds like a dystopian nightmare.
Further, it seems obvious to me that many of the decisions made by the Ethereum community are only intended to benefit wealth hoarders and early investors (PoS and the deflationary aspect). Their decisions don’t seem to have the larger global community in mind, at least in an authentic way. They seem to see it, simply, as a store of value.