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The Consumption You Call Saving

Holding money does not defer gratification but consumes the opportunity cost of lending, making hoarding a present expense rather than proof of low time preference.

Time preference, in its proper economic sense, refers to the universal human tendency to value present goods over future goods. A dollar today is worth more than a dollar next year, not because of inflation or uncertainty alone, but because time itself has value as a necessary factor of all production and consumption. The economic rate of interest emerges from this preference: lenders demand compensation for parting with capital they could otherwise use now, and borrowers pay because they value having capital sooner rather than later. Interest, then, is the price of time itself, set by the aggregate preferences of all participants in capital markets.

The popular Bitcoin interpretation treats time preference as synonymous with the decision to save rather than spend. In this telling, the person who holds bitcoin demonstrates low time preference, while the person who spends fiat demonstrates high time preference. Civilization, they argue, advances when people lower their time preference, meaning when they save more and consume less. Sound money encourages this lowering by protecting purchasing power across time. The entire framework, however, rests on a conflation that Austrian economics explicitly rejects.

Savings in the economic sense encompasses two entirely distinct categories. The first is investment, which means lending capital to production in exchange for interest. The second is hoarding, which means holding capital idle, neither consuming goods directly nor lending to others. These two activities represent opposite poles of time preference expression. When a person invests, they trade present capital for future capital plus interest, accepting the deferred return as compensation for time without their property. When a person hoards, they retain immediate access to their capital while forgoing the interest they could have earned. The investor captures the time value of money; the hoarder consumes it.

This distinction matters because only investment expresses time preference in the economic sense. A person who lends at interest demonstrates willingness to exchange present goods for future goods. A person who hoards demonstrates the opposite: they value immediate availability over future return. The opportunity cost of not lending is, at minimum, the prevailing rate of interest. That cost does not disappear simply because no invoice arrives. To hold capital idle is to pay for liquidity, for optionality, for the entertainment of speculation, or for peace of mind in an uncertain world. All of these are forms of present consumption.

The logical absurdity of the popular interpretation becomes clear when pushed to its conclusion. If saving rather than spending demonstrated low time preference, then the person who saves 100% of their income and invests none of it would possess the lowest time preference imaginable. But in a world where everyone hoarded all capital, no lending would occur. Interest rates would not fall to zero; they would rise toward infinity, because anyone needing capital for production would face an entirely empty market. Capital would become infinitely expensive because nobody would part with it. Infinite interest rates, however, reflect infinite time preference by definition: the total unwillingness to exchange present for future goods. The person who hoards everything is not demonstrating patience; they are expressing the highest possible preference for immediate possession over deferred return.

The confusion arises from treating "deferred consumption" as equivalent to not purchasing goods. But as Rothbard himself noted, all savings must be allocated between hoarding and investment. Hoarding is not non-consumption; it is consumption of the carry cost of idle capital. A car rusts, food spoils, furniture wears out, and money depreciates by the amount of interest forgone. The present value of any capital is always discounted against its future value by the rate of interest. To hoard money for a year is to consume one year's worth of interest, which represents the time value of that capital over the period held. The person who holds bitcoin "for the future" is not deferring anything. They are consuming the option value of immediate liquidity right now. They are consuming the entertainment value of price speculation right now. They are consuming the psychological comfort of financial security right now. These are all present satisfactions purchased with present capital.

What, then, would genuine low time preference look like? It would look like lending bitcoin to entrepreneurs for interest. It would look like investing in productive enterprises that generate returns through actual economic activity. The lender demonstrates willingness to part with present capital in exchange for future capital plus compensation. The HODLer demonstrates unwillingness to part with capital at all, meaning they value present possession more than any offered future return. The lender's time preference is revealed by the minimum interest rate at which they will lend. The HODLer's time preference is revealed by their rejection of all offered rates.

None of this undermines Bitcoin's value proposition as money. Sound money does benefit society by protecting purchasing power and enabling long term planning. But sound money's virtue lies in facilitating investment, not in encouraging hoarding. A money that no one will lend does not lower time preference; it creates a world where capital cannot reach production and economic growth ceases. The medieval miser who buried gold coins beneath his floor was not building civilization. He was consuming his wealth coin by coin through the opportunity cost of idleness.

The Bitcoin community has unwittingly adopted the very error that Austrian economics spent a century refuting. They have defined virtue as passivity, investment as holding, and low time preference as high preference dressed in moralistic language. The HODLer who mocks spenders has no more claim to economic sophistication than the miser counting coins by candlelight. Both are consuming their capital in the present while telling themselves they're saving it for the future. The only difference is the HODLer has convinced himself that consuming opportunity cost is the same as building civilization. Time has a price, and those who refuse to sell it still pay.

Replies (4)

> The medieval miser who buried gold coins beneath his floor was not building civilization. But he was making things cheaper for those willing to spend.
Interesting perspective