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Layer 2 (L2) solutions aim to alleviate the well-known scalability issues of the bitcoin network, but these very issues characterize the prevailing and most widely accepted narrative surrounding bitcoin: that it is a commodity, not a currency.
A commodity is a useful or valuable raw material that can be bought or sold. Bitcoin is often compared to commodities such as gold, the bitcoin community even describes it as “digital gold.” This has highlighted bitcoin’s ability to serve as a superb store of value, but doesn’t help bitcoin’s case for being a viable currency.
L2s not only answer the charge that bitcoin can’t be a global currency, they add functionality to the network that extends its influence far past a payment network. But with that answer comes several questions:
- Can technological advancements force the bitcoin community to change its narrative?
- How can the bitcoin community support this narrative when L2s force them to renege their original reasons for presenting it?
- In what sense is bitcoin a raw material analogous to gold?
- How do layer 2 solutions support or diminish this analogy?
This article aims to answer these questions and more while investigating the economic position of bitcoin post-layer 2s.
Digital Currency To Digital Commodity
The original bitcoin narrative goes as follows: Bitcoin was created as a form of digital currency; its creator intended it to be a decentralized replacement for fiat currency.
This digital money was designed to be scarce and deflationary with a supply forever capped at 21 million via its mining mechanism, which halves the amount of bitcoin created every four years. The miners who secure the network are then paid transaction fees once all the bitcoin is mined. The idea that bitcoin mass adoption implies being used frequently in transactions like a global currency is baked into the protocol structure itself.
Shortly after bitcoin started to gain a following users pointed out some problems with the original vision of bitcoin as a currency. This primarily had to do with problems of scalability and the ability to process a high volume of transactions. A native bitcoin transaction is too slow and costly for everyday transactions such as buying a coffee, yet the definition of currency requires the item to be used as general use money. Unfortunately, the transaction pace and fees are unchangeable features of the native blockchain and, therefore, seem to permanently bottleneck global adoption as a currency.
Instead of giving up on bitcoin, the narrative surrounding its economic position changed to “digital gold.” The idea was that because bitcoin isn’t feasible as a currency, the community should instead treat it as a basic digital object useful for storing value by virtue of its scarcity and immutability. This narrative caught on, and laws even followed suit, with many countries officially classifying bitcoin accordingly as a commodity.
This conversation continues as an important debate within legal regimes as regulations differ surrounding the ownership, sale, and exchange of currencies vs. commodities. The legal definition of bitcoin characterizes how it can be adopted in various countries; a misclassification can stifle or even ban its existence.
How Layer 2 Solutions Challenge The Bitcoin Narrative
A layer 2 solution is a blockchain built on top of or alongside another that extends the functionality of the base chain. Typically, the goal of a layer 2 solution is to make the native blockchain scalable. For Bitcoin, at least at first, this meant making transactions cheaper and faster.
The most popular layer 2 solution to do this is the Lightning Network. The Lightning Network operates by creating payment channels between users. Two parties can open a channel by locking a certain amount of Bitcoin into a multi-signature address. Once the channel is open, they can conduct unlimited transactions off-chain. Only the final state of the channel, once it is closed, is recorded on the Bitcoin blockchain.
By moving small transactions off the main blockchain and settling them after the fact, L2s can make bitcoin transactions nearly instant and fees practically non-existent. Such upgrades force one to reconsider if bitcoin can be a system of money in general use:
Everyday Use
With low cost and fast transactions bitcoin can become viable for everyday transactions such as buying a coffee.
User Growth
As bitcoin becomes more practical for daily transactions, the user base can expand to those previously restricted by fees. This reinstates the possibility of bitcoin as a universal global currency.
Adoption by Businesses
Lower transaction costs and faster settlement times make Bitcoin more attractive to merchants and businesses.
Spending
Now that bitcoin can be used as easily as any other currency, this new functionality promotes spending bitcoin as opposed to holding. This permanently affects the economics of Bitcoin as it implies a circulating supply similar to a currency widely used.
At face value, the advent of bitcoin layer 2s seem to deter its classification as a commodity, the original gripes with bitcoin being widely adopted as a currency are at least in principle defeated. Further, the basic economic dynamics of bitcoin must change with the expectation that it will be changing hands more frequently. The original considerations that led the global community to accept bitcoin as a commodity no longer hold. If the lightning network becomes globally adopted, bitcoins main use will be a general money and it will better fall within the classification of currency.
However, scaling bitcoin past its original limit gave it far more use cases than being used as money. This additional usefulness of bitcoin beyond being simple money forces one to reconsider the way it is defined as a commodity.
Layer 2s Beyond Lighting: An Explosion Of Use Cases
Ironically, the cryptocurrency industry has moved far past “currency.” Elements such as smart contracts, dApps, and NFTs have brought more functionalities to blockchain technology than bitcoin’s creator could have imagined.
As layer 2 solutions use secondary blockchains to extend the functionality of the base chain, it’s natural that bitcoin layer 2 solutions would emerge to give bitcoin the capabilities revered in other blockchains.
Layer 2 solutions such as Stacks and Rootstock built methods to connect smart contract compatible blockchains to the native bitcoin network. The execution of smart contracts on the bitcoin blockchain opens up the world of decentralized infrastructure. Decentralized applications such as DeFi protocols, video games, and social media platforms can now be powered and secured by the bitcoin network.
Furthermore, scaling solutions and other innovations allow for non-fungible tokens (NFTs) to be created and traded on the bitcoin blockchain. This brings the ecosystem of art, collectibles, and other NFT use cases directly onto bitcoin.
A new vision of bitcoin is starting to solidify among followers of these developments. The possibility of the bitcoin blockchain acting as the ultimate foundation for the entire decentralized ecosystem. Through these layer 2 solutions, developers can create any tool or application and access the robust decentralization and security of the bitcoin network.
Bitcoin is by far the most decentralized and secure blockchain network that exists; by building on bitcoin, developers leverage these unmatched properties of the bitcoin network and can apply them to their projects.
The Gold Analogy Revisited
Although bitcoin may be used in the future as a global currency, its expanding functionality due to layer 2 solutions points back to the definition of commodity. Usefulness is a core feature of commodities. Raw materials are useful in a variety of ways, such as art, building materials, food, and stores of value.
If bitcoin was just used as a medium of exchange and a store of value, like general money, it would be more similar to a global digital currency. But layer 2 solutions demand that bitcoin be so much more. The bitcoin network is set to be the foundation for the future of all decentralized infrastructure, a kind of ultimate digital commodity. This can be seen clearer by revisiting the gold analogy.
In the shape of a coin, gold can be used as currency. If put in wiring or as a building material, it can lend its properties to help build physical infrastructure. Seen just as a pretty mineral, it can be made into a piece of art. Gold is a simple material with certain characteristics that allow it to take on many roles.
Similarly, bitcoin can be used as a currency via the lighting network. It can be built into decentralized infrastructure to make it more secure by using programs like Stacks. It can even be minted into an art piece via the ordinal protocol. Here, we can see bitcoin as the ultimate digital material used in various ways in a variety of final products.
The features of the bitcoin network correlate with the properties of materials like gold. The robustness of bitcoin security, the wide reach of the network, and the history of its use are all analogous to mineral properties (shininess, hardness, conductivity, etc.) that make them useful.
In the end, layer 2 solutions challenge but do not defeat the narrative that bitcoin is a digital commodity. Although the bitcoin community is forced to reconsider in what way bitcoin is a commodity, the narrative of bitcoin is stronger for it. Layer 2s reveal an even more grandiose narrative for bitcoin, and the use cases they allow for bolster the case for bitcoin as a commodity more than was previously conceivable.
Comparing bitcoin to gold does bitcoin a disservice; the ultimate usefulness of Bitcoin as a commodity extends far past what gold ever achieved.