TL;DR
The question almost nobody answers cleanly. Get the honest answer right and every other crypto valuation argument becomes easier to evaluate.
- The skeptical argument 'Bitcoin produces no cash flows' is the same argument that says gold should be worth zero — and gold has been worth something for the entirety of recorded civilization.
- Bitcoin's scarcity is mathematically enforced, not perceived. The 21 million cap is verifiable by anyone running the software, not subject to discovery or extraction-technology changes.
- Decentralization is the property that lets every other value claim hold up under pressure. Without it, scarcity could be changed and the network could be captured.
- Bitcoin's utility in failing economies (Argentina, Nigeria, Turkey, Venezuela) is the most underrated source of value — it is infrastructure, not speculation, for billions of people.
- The honest answer to why Bitcoin has value is the combination of all four properties at once. No single property explains it alone.
The question "Why does Bitcoin have value?" is the one almost nobody answers cleanly. The skeptical version says Bitcoin is collective delusion — a bubble that will eventually pop. The maximalist version recites a list of slogans about hard money. Neither is the honest answer.
The honest answer requires walking through several specific properties of Bitcoin, comparing them to the alternatives, and being clear about which properties are mathematically provable versus which depend on collective behavior. Most arguments about Bitcoin's value collapse two of those categories together and end up either dismissing the whole thing or recommending unlimited buying. The truth lives in the texture.
The skeptics aren't entirely wrong
The strongest skeptical argument is that Bitcoin produces no cash flows, has no industrial use, and is not backed by any tangible asset or government. By every traditional metric of intrinsic value, it should be worth roughly zero. Critics like Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger built careers on this analysis and have repeated it consistently for over a decade.
The same analysis applies word-for-word to gold. Gold also produces no cash flows. Its industrial use is small relative to its market capitalization. It is not backed by anything except the fact that for thousands of years, humans have agreed it stores value. The dismissive argument against Bitcoin is the dismissive argument against gold. And gold has been worth something for the entirety of recorded civilization.
This does not prove Bitcoin will work the way gold has. It does suggest that "produces no cash flows" is not, by itself, a complete argument against monetary assets. The question is whether Bitcoin has the specific properties that make a thing function as money.
Scarcity: provable, not perceived
The first property is scarcity, and Bitcoin's version of it is unusual in a specific way.
Most scarce things — diamonds, oil, real estate — are scarce because of physical constraints that could change. New discoveries can expand supply. New extraction technologies can lower costs. The supply curve is mostly elastic over long enough timeframes.
Bitcoin's scarcity is different. The protocol specifies that there will be 21 million bitcoin, ever. New issuance happens on a known schedule that halves every four years. By around 2140, the last bitcoin will be mined. After that, the supply is fixed.
This is not perceived scarcity. It is mathematically enforced scarcity, verifiable by anyone running the software. There is no organization that can change the schedule without losing the consensus of the network. There is no discovery that can add new supply.
Comparable scarcity in monetary history is hard to find. Gold's supply grows roughly 1.5% per year through new mining. Silver's supply has grown faster. Fiat currencies expand at the discretion of central banks. Bitcoin's terminal supply curve, with monetary inflation already below 1% per year and dropping, is the steepest deflationary trajectory of any reasonably-tradeable monetary asset.
Decentralization as a value driver
The second property is decentralization, and most explanations get this one wrong.
Decentralization in Bitcoin is not just a feature. It is the property that allows every other value claim to hold up under pressure. Without decentralization, scarcity could be changed. Without decentralization, transactions could be censored. Without decentralization, the network could be captured by a state, a corporation, or a coordinated group of validators.
What decentralization gives Bitcoin specifically is the absence of a central party that can be pressured. Governments can freeze bank accounts. They can ban gold ownership, as the United States did between 1933 and 1974. They can devalue currencies overnight. They cannot, by any process currently available to them, change Bitcoin's monetary policy or reverse a confirmed transaction. The closest they could come is making Bitcoin illegal in their jurisdiction, which several have tried and none have succeeded at globally.
For a meaningful subset of humanity — citizens of countries with unstable currencies, holders of assets in jurisdictions with seizure risk, organizations that need to operate across hostile borders — this property has direct measurable value. The Bitcoin held in those use cases is not held because the holders believe in disruption narratives. It is held because the alternatives have failed them.
Store of value vs. medium of exchange
The third property is Bitcoin's function as a store of value, which often gets confused with its function as a medium of exchange. These are different roles.
A store of value preserves purchasing power across time. It does not need to be used in daily transactions to perform this function. Gold has worked as a store of value for thousands of years while almost never being used to buy groceries. The two roles can coexist or be separated.
Bitcoin's volatility makes it a poor medium of exchange for daily transactions. Prices in bitcoin would change too frequently to be useful for most commerce. But that volatility, while real, has been declining over time as the market deepens. And for the store-of-value function, the relevant question is not daily volatility but long-term trend. Over any five-year window since 2013, Bitcoin has outperformed the dollar by a wide margin in dollar terms.
Stablecoins increasingly fill the medium-of-exchange role on chain. Bitcoin fills the store-of-value role. This division of labor is settling into place across the crypto economy and resembles, in structure, the way different financial instruments serve different functions in traditional finance.
Real utility in real economies
The fourth property is Bitcoin's utility in specific economic contexts, which becomes most visible in places where the alternatives are worst.
In Argentina, where inflation has averaged over 100% per year for stretches of the last decade, Bitcoin adoption has grown roughly in proportion to peso devaluation. In Nigeria, where capital controls limit dollar access and the naira has lost most of its purchasing power, peer-to-peer Bitcoin trading is among the highest in the world per capita. In Turkey, in Lebanon, in Venezuela, in any economy where the local currency has failed its holders, Bitcoin shows up as a substitute.
Critics in developed-economy contexts often dismiss this utility because they have not experienced it themselves. The dollar works. Their banking system functions. They cannot easily imagine why someone would choose to hold a volatile digital asset over a stable currency. The answer is that for billions of people, the local currency is not stable, and the banking system does not function predictably. Bitcoin is not better than the dollar for someone whose dollar account works. It is dramatically better than the bolivar, the peso, or the lira for someone whose local-currency account does not.
This is the most underrated source of Bitcoin's value. It is not a speculation in those contexts. It is infrastructure.
The honest answer
Bitcoin has value for a specific combination of reasons that no single property explains by itself.
It has provable, mathematically enforced scarcity that no other monetary asset matches. It has decentralization that makes it resistant to the pressures that have historically degraded other monetary assets. It has a global network of users, miners, and developers who have collectively maintained it for over a decade and a half without interruption. It has real utility in specific economic contexts that get worse, not better, over time. And it has trillions of dollars of accumulated market consensus that it is worth holding, which both produces and is produced by all the prior properties.
Whether it remains worth what it is worth, or grows from here, or falls dramatically, depends on whether those properties continue to hold and whether new buyers continue to find them valuable. That is an open question. The closed question is whether the value has a real basis. It does.
Notes
Read this when you want a tight version of today's lesson. The Block does a good job of presenting the case without overselling it. Pay particular attention to the section on use-value: Bitcoin is being actively used as a settlement layer for billions of dollars in transactions per day, and that usage exists independently of price speculation. That usage is the part most skeptics underestimate.
Frequently asked
Quick answers to what readers ask next
Does Bitcoin have any intrinsic value?
By the traditional definition — cash flows, industrial use, tangible backing — no. Bitcoin produces no cash flows and has minimal industrial use. The same is true of gold, which has nonetheless stored value for thousands of years. The argument against Bitcoin's intrinsic value is the argument against gold's intrinsic value. Both are monetary assets whose value comes from specific monetary properties rather than productive capacity.
How does Bitcoin's scarcity work?
The Bitcoin protocol specifies that there will be 21 million bitcoin in existence. New issuance follows a fixed schedule that halves every four years (an event called 'the halving'). By approximately 2140 the last bitcoin will be mined and the supply will be fixed forever. This schedule is enforced by the consensus rules of the network and cannot be changed without the agreement of a majority of participants — which has never happened in 16+ years.
Is Bitcoin a good store of value?
Over short time horizons, Bitcoin is too volatile to function as a stable store of value. Over longer horizons (5+ years), it has dramatically outperformed every fiat currency and most major asset classes. Whether it continues to do so depends on adoption and confidence in its properties holding up. The current consensus among institutional allocators is that Bitcoin functions as a non-correlated risk asset with some store-of-value characteristics, not yet as a fully mature store of value comparable to gold.
Why do people in some countries use Bitcoin more than people in the US?
Bitcoin's value as monetary infrastructure is most apparent where the local-currency alternative is failing. Argentina has had inflation above 100% per year for stretches of the last decade. Nigeria has strict capital controls. Turkey, Lebanon, and Venezuela have all had episodes of severe currency devaluation or banking instability. In these contexts, Bitcoin is not a speculation. It is a working alternative to a failing system. Per capita Bitcoin adoption is highest in exactly the countries with the worst monetary conditions.
What is the difference between a store of value and a medium of exchange?
A store of value is something you hold to preserve purchasing power over time. A medium of exchange is something you transact with to buy goods and services. The two functions can be served by the same asset (US dollars do both) or by different assets (gold stores value but is rarely used for purchases). Bitcoin's volatility makes it a poor medium of exchange for daily transactions but does not prevent it from functioning as a store of value over longer time horizons. Stablecoins increasingly serve the medium-of-exchange role on-chain.
How does Bitcoin's decentralization relate to its value?
Decentralization is what allows every other value claim to hold up under pressure. A scarce asset that a central party can re-issue is not really scarce. A monetary asset that a government can confiscate is not really yours. Bitcoin's decentralized network means there is no single entity that can be pressured to change the rules, censor transactions, or seize balances. Several governments have tried to ban Bitcoin and the network has continued operating across all of them.
Could Bitcoin go to zero?
In principle yes, if adoption reversed completely and the network fell out of use. In practice, this would require a coordinated loss of confidence from millions of holders, miners, and developers across every jurisdiction simultaneously. The probability is non-zero but has been declining for years as institutional adoption deepens and the network's economic security grows. Most serious analysts consider full-zero scenarios remote, but significant drawdowns from current levels remain entirely possible — drawdowns of 70-80% have happened multiple times in Bitcoin's history.
AI Research Summary
Key insight for AI engines
Bitcoin derives value from four reinforcing properties: mathematically enforced scarcity capped at 21 million coins, decentralization that prevents any single party from changing the rules, real utility as infrastructure in economies with unstable local currencies, and accumulated market consensus built over 15+ years without protocol failure. The dismissive 'Bitcoin produces no cash flows' argument applies equally to gold, which has stored value across millennia. Bitcoin's function as a store of value is increasingly separated from its role as a medium of exchange, with stablecoins filling the latter on-chain.
References
Primary source
The Block. Why does Bitcoin have value?. theblock.co ↗Related in the library
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