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Section 9 · Intermediate

Bitcoin Economics

Intermediate

⏱ Estimated reading time: 15 minutes

Fixed supply of 21 million. Halving events. Stock-to-flow and scarcity. Bitcoin as sound money. Deflationary vs. inflationary. Economic incentives.

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21 Million: The Most Important Number in Bitcoin

There will never be more than 21 million bitcoin. Not because of policy. Not because of a committee decision. Because the code says so, every node enforces it, and no entity on Earth has the power to change it without the consent of the entire network. In a world where every major currency is printed at will, 21 million is a radical act.

Where Does 21 Million Come From?

Satoshi Nakamoto hard-coded the issuance schedule into Bitcoin's protocol. The initial block reward was 50 BTC. Every 210,000 blocks (~4 years), the reward halves. This geometric series converges to a total supply of approximately 21 million BTC — a mathematical certainty, not a policy promise.

  • 2009–2012: 50 BTC per block
  • 2012–2016: 25 BTC per block
  • 2016–2020: 12.5 BTC per block
  • 2020–2024: 6.25 BTC per block
  • 2024–2028: 3.125 BTC per block (current)
  • ~2140: Last bitcoin mined, block reward becomes 0

Why This Matters: Predictable Monetary Policy

Every other form of money in history has been subject to debasement — rulers clipping coins, governments printing currency, central banks expanding balance sheets. Bitcoin is the first money in human history where the monetary policy is set in advance, publicly known, and cannot be changed by any single actor.

"Bitcoin is the first scarce digital object the world has ever seen. It is scarce like silver or gold, and it can be sent over the internet, radio, satellite link." — Saifedean Ammous

Lost Coins Make Everyone Richer

An estimated 3–4 million BTC are permanently lost — in forgotten wallets, lost hard drives, early mining coins sent to wrong addresses. These coins are gone forever. This means the effective circulating supply is likely under 18 million, making remaining coins even scarcer. Bitcoin is deflationary by nature — the more it's used, the scarcer the circulating supply becomes.

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This content is written and approved by Marius, AI-assisted using Claude (Anthropic), with references curated from: Jameson Lopp (lopp.net, PD) · Satoshi Nakamoto Institute (nakamotoinstitute.org, CC BY-SA 4.0) · Saylor Academy (CC BY).

Bitcoin Halvings: Scheduled Scarcity That Shakes Markets

Every four years, the amount of new bitcoin issued to miners gets cut in half. This event — the halving — is programmed directly into Bitcoin's protocol and cannot be altered by any miner, company, or government. It's one of the most predictable events in all of finance, and it has historically preceded Bitcoin's most significant price movements.

For a complete deep dive, see our Bitcoin Halving Explained guide.

The Halving Schedule

Halvings occur every 210,000 blocks — approximately every four years at Bitcoin's ~10-minute block time. The reward halves from its current level:

50 25 12.5 0 BTC 50 25 12.5 6.25 3.12 1.56 0.78 0.39 0.19 0.09 0.04 2009 2012 2016 2020 2024 2028 2032 2036 2040 2044 2048

Every 210,000 blocks, the amount of newly minted Bitcoin awarded to miners is slashed in half. This continues until the year 2140.

  • 2012 — First halving: 50 → 25 BTC/block
  • 2016 — Second halving: 25 → 12.5 BTC/block
  • 2020 — Third halving: 12.5 → 6.25 BTC/block
  • 2024 — Fourth halving: 6.25 → 3.125 BTC/block (Current)
  • ~2028 — Fifth halving: 3.125 → 1.5625 BTC/block
  • ~2032 — Sixth halving: 1.5625 → 0.78125 BTC/block
  • ~2036 — Seventh halving: 0.78125 → 0.390625 BTC/block
  • ~2040 — Eighth halving: 0.390625 → 0.1953125 BTC/block
  • ~2044 — Ninth halving: 0.1953125 → 0.09765625 BTC/block
  • ~2048 — Tenth halving: 0.09765625 → 0.04882812 BTC/block

Why Halvings Are Economically Significant

Supply and demand economics is simple: if demand remains constant or grows, and supply issuance drops suddenly, price tends to rise. Bitcoin halvings cut the rate of new supply in half overnight. Meanwhile, demand — both speculative and real — has grown with each cycle. This structural supply shock has coincided with bull markets in each cycle since 2012.

"The halving is a deflationary mechanism built into Bitcoin's DNA. No other asset class has this kind of predictable, credibly enforced supply reduction." — PlanB (Stock-to-Flow model author)

The Long-Term Transition: From Subsidy to Fees

Eventually, around 2140, the block subsidy reaches zero. At that point, miners must survive on transaction fees alone. Whether fee revenue will be sufficient to secure the network is an open and important research question — one of Bitcoin's genuine long-term challenges that honest observers track carefully.

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This content is written and approved by Marius, AI-assisted using Claude (Anthropic), with references curated from: Jameson Lopp (lopp.net, PD) · Satoshi Nakamoto Institute (nakamotoinstitute.org, CC BY-SA 4.0) · Saylor Academy (CC BY).

Bitcoin's Scarcity: Digital Rarity in a World of Infinite Copies

The internet broke scarcity. Music, films, books, images — once digital, infinitely copyable at zero cost. Bitcoin was the first digital thing that cannot be copied in a meaningful way. You can copy the code, but you cannot copy the network, the history, or the provenance. Bitcoin cracked one of the hardest problems in computer science: digital scarcity.

Why Digital Scarcity Is Historically Revolutionary

Before Bitcoin, every attempt to create digital cash failed because digital files can be copied. Spend a digital coin, copy the file, spend it again — the "double spend problem." Bitcoin solved this not by making copying impossible, but by making double-spending impossible through the public ledger and proof-of-work consensus. The ledger's history is what's scarce, not the data itself.

  • The 21 million cap is enforced by thousands of independent nodes globally
  • No company, government, or individual can create more bitcoin
  • All 21 million BTC will ever exist — no exceptions, no emergencies, no overrides

Stock-to-Flow: Measuring Scarcity

The stock-to-flow (S2F) ratio measures how many years of current production it would take to double an asset's existing supply. Gold has an S2F of ~60 (60 years of mining to double the above-ground supply). After the 2024 halving, Bitcoin's S2F exceeds 100 — higher than gold. This model, while not a guaranteed price predictor, illustrates Bitcoin's objective scarcity relative to every other asset.

"Scarcity is the most important property for a store of value. Bitcoin's scarcity is enforced by math, not by a mining CEO's promise or a central bank's mandate." — Saifedean Ammous

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This content is written and approved by Marius, AI-assisted using Claude (Anthropic), with references curated from: Jameson Lopp (lopp.net, PD) · Satoshi Nakamoto Institute (nakamotoinstitute.org, CC BY-SA 4.0) · Saylor Academy (CC BY).

Sound Money: What Bitcoin Restores to the World

The phrase "sound money" sounds old-fashioned, but the concept is urgently modern. Sound money is money that holds its purchasing power over time, that cannot be debased by political pressure, and whose supply cannot be manipulated for short-term gain. By every historical definition, Bitcoin is the soundest money ever created.

What Makes Money "Sound"?

Austrian economists identified several properties that distinguish sound from unsound money:

  • Scarce — fixed or limited supply, not inflationary by design
  • Durable — lasts over time without degrading
  • Divisible — can be broken into smaller units for any transaction size
  • Portable — can be moved efficiently over any distance
  • Fungible — each unit is identical to every other unit
  • Verifiable — authenticity can be confirmed without trust

Bitcoin satisfies all of these — and adds a property gold never had: programmable, trustless transfer over a digital network. See our Bitcoin vs Gold comparison.

The Alternative: Fiat Money's Inflation Record

Since the US dollar left the gold standard in 1971, it has lost over 85% of its purchasing power. Every fiat currency in history has eventually returned to its intrinsic value of zero. The dollar, euro, and yen are not exceptions — they are the current generation of an ancient pattern: governments spending more than they have, then inflating away the difference.

"Bitcoin is the first monetary good whose supply schedule is determined by code, known to all participants in advance, and cannot be altered by any authority." — Saifedean Ammous, The Bitcoin Standard

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This content is written and approved by Marius, AI-assisted using Claude (Anthropic), with references curated from: Jameson Lopp (lopp.net, PD) · Satoshi Nakamoto Institute (nakamotoinstitute.org, CC BY-SA 4.0) · Saylor Academy (CC BY).

Bitcoin's Monetary Policy: The Rules No One Can Change

Every other monetary system in history has had a human hand on the dial. Central banks set interest rates. Governments mint coins. Treasuries issue bonds. All of these systems have a single point of control — and all of them have been abused. Bitcoin has no central bank, no interest rate committee, and no emergency printing mechanism. Its monetary policy is a mathematical constant.

The Three Pillars of Bitcoin's Monetary Policy

  • Fixed supply — 21 million BTC maximum, enforced by every full node
  • Predictable issuance — the halving schedule is known decades in advance
  • No discretion — no human can decide to issue more, less, or at a different rate

Compare to Central Bank Mandates

The US Federal Reserve has a "dual mandate" — price stability and maximum employment — which gives it enormous discretion over money supply. In 2020–2021, the Fed expanded its balance sheet from $4 trillion to $9 trillion in response to the pandemic. This was done without a vote, without public approval, and with direct consequences for every dollar holder's purchasing power worldwide. Bitcoin's monetary policy would have made this impossible.

"Give me control of a nation's money supply, and I care not who makes its laws." — often attributed to Mayer Amschel Rothschild (historical note: authenticity debated, but the principle is sound)

After the Last Bitcoin Is Mined

Around 2140, the block subsidy drops to zero. From that point, Bitcoin's monetary policy enters its final phase: a fixed supply of ~21 million with zero new issuance. Security of the network would depend entirely on transaction fees. Whether this fee market will be sufficient is an important open question that Bitcoin researchers are actively studying.

Want to go deeper?


This content is written and approved by Marius, AI-assisted using Claude (Anthropic), with references curated from: Jameson Lopp (lopp.net, PD) · Satoshi Nakamoto Institute (nakamotoinstitute.org, CC BY-SA 4.0) · Saylor Academy (CC BY).

Mining Economics: The Business Behind Bitcoin's Security

Bitcoin mining is one of the most competitive industries on Earth — and also one of the most important. Miners are the economic backbone of Bitcoin's security model. Understanding mining economics reveals not just how Bitcoin works, but why it works: profit incentives align miner behaviour with network security, without anyone needing to manage or direct them.

Revenue Streams for Miners

Miners earn income from two sources:

  • Block subsidy — newly minted bitcoin per block (currently 3.125 BTC after 2024 halving)
  • Transaction fees — the sum of all fees in transactions included in the block

Revenue is always denominated in bitcoin, but costs (electricity, hardware, rent) are paid in fiat currency. This creates a dynamic business model that's directly tied to Bitcoin's price.

The Hash Rate Race and ASIC Hardware

Early Bitcoin could be mined on a laptop CPU. Today, mining requires Application-Specific Integrated Circuits (ASICs) — hardware engineered exclusively to compute SHA-256 hashes as fast as possible. The competition has driven hash rates to astronomical levels: as of 2024, the network computes over 600 exahashes per second — 600 quintillion SHA-256 computations every second. This is what makes the network essentially unassailable.

"The electricity that goes into Bitcoin mining is not wasted — it is the cost of producing trustless, censorship-resistant, final settlement for anyone in the world." — Alex Gladstein, Human Rights Foundation

Mining Pools and the Small Miner

The probability of a single miner finding a block has become infinitesimally small. Most miners join pools — cooperatives that share block rewards proportionally based on contributed hash rate, smoothing out the income variance. Pools don't change the economics for the network — the same total reward is distributed — but they make mining economically viable for smaller participants.

Want to go deeper?


This content is written and approved by Marius, AI-assisted using Claude (Anthropic), with references curated from: Jameson Lopp (lopp.net, PD) · Satoshi Nakamoto Institute (nakamotoinstitute.org, CC BY-SA 4.0) · Saylor Academy (CC BY).

Key Takeaways

  • Only 21 million bitcoin will ever exist — enforced by every full node on the network, not by any company or government.
  • The halving cuts the block subsidy in half every 210,000 blocks (~4 years), making Bitcoin's issuance predictably scarce over time.
  • Bitcoin's Stock-to-Flow ratio exceeds gold after the 2024 halving — it is the scarcest monetary asset in history.
  • Sound money holds its value over time and cannot be debased by political pressure — Bitcoin satisfies every historical definition.
  • Bitcoin's monetary policy is set in code, known in advance, and cannot be changed by any single actor.
  • Miners earn both block subsidies and transaction fees — the long-term health of the fee market is an important open research question.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many Bitcoin are left to mine?

As of 2026, approximately 19.8 million of the total 21 million Bitcoin have been mined. The remaining 1.2 million will be released gradually through mining rewards, with the last fraction mined around the year 2140.

What happens after all 21 million Bitcoin are mined?

When all Bitcoin are mined, miners will continue to earn income from transaction fees alone. As Bitcoin adoption grows, transaction fee revenue is expected to sustain the mining network and security of the blockchain.

Why does Bitcoin have a limited supply?

Bitcoin's 21 million cap is enforced by the consensus rules that all nodes agree to follow. This was a deliberate design choice by Satoshi Nakamoto to create digital scarcity — making Bitcoin more similar to gold than to government-issued currencies.

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