Ideal Money and Asymptotically Ideal Money
A Cypherpunk's Library
Ideal Money and Asymptotically Ideal Money
John F. Nash Jr.
2002 · 8 pages
The game theorist and Nobel laureate's argument that money becomes “ideal” when its value holds steady over time: a stable standard of measurement, not a thing managed by inflationary discretion. Nash proposes pegging currency to an objective index of prices, and sketches “asymptotically ideal money” as the practical path: currencies that, through competition and credible policy, converge toward a reliable long-term store of value.
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