Inflation isn’t rising prices; Inflation is currency debasement.
Your Dollar Buys Less, But the Item Hasn’t Changed
Fuel didn’t get more valuable. Groceries didn’t become scarce overnight. The coffee you bought last year is the same coffee this year.
So why does everything cost more? Because your measuring stick—your money—is broken.

The Unit of Account Is Broken
We price everything in dollars (or other fiat currency). But when the dollar is constantly being diluted, prices appear to rise—not because of real change, but because the value of the unit itself is being eroded.
It’s like measuring with a rubber ruler. If the ruler gets shorter every time you use it, everything starts to look longer. In truth, the thing being measured hasn’t changed. Your tool has.
You’re Not Falling Behind—Fiat Is
The average person feels poorer today than a generation ago. And it’s not because they’re less productive. In fact, productivity is up.
What’s changed is that the scarcity of the money has gone down, meaning its ability to store value over time has been compromised. This creates the illusion that everything around you is getting more expensive, when in reality, your money is just becoming less valuable.
Price Inflation Is a Symptom. Monetary Debasement Is the Cause.
Whenever governments print new currency, they’re inflating the money supply. And when more dollars chase the same goods, prices rise. Consumer price inflation (aka. CPI) is therefore downstream of monetary supply growth.
The instinctive reaction to blame the grocer, the landlord, or the car dealer for increasing their prices, reveals a fundamental misunderstanding in how money works. Merchants, tradespeople, and professionals are not raising prices because they are greedy—they’re simply repricing their goods and/or services to reflect a unit of account that is falling in value.
Bitcoin Fixes the Frame
With a fixed terminal supply of 21 million units, Bitcoin offers absolute scarcity, restoring integrity to the monetary frame of reference. It doesn’t move the goalposts. It doesn’t punish savers. It doesn’t blur the picture.
In a Bitcoin-denominated world, prices will become true reflections of demand and supply—not distortions due to currency debasement. Value will once again be preservable, measurable, and exchangeable without hidden erosion.
The Bottom Line
- Prices aren’t going up. Your fiat currency (eg. dollar) is going down.
- Inflation is the debasement of your money—not the increasing prices of goods.
- Bitcoin’s absolute scarcity offers a new monetary standard—one where your purchasing power cannot be eroded.
