Here's a question that sounds academic but actually matters a lot if you own crypto: Is Bitcoin (BTC) actually scarce, or just finite? Cryptocurrency analyst Willy Woo jumped into that debate this week, and his answer might surprise you.
The Scarcity Showdown
The discussion kicked off when Matteo Pellegrini, CEO of Bitcoin-focused social network Club Orange, pushed back on the idea that Bitcoin is scarce. His take? Bitcoin isn't scarce—it's finite. There's a difference.
Woo wasn't having it. He argued that scarcity means "limited supply relative to demand," and Bitcoin absolutely checks that box. His evidence? Look at the price chart. Bitcoin went from $0.0001 to $100,000 over 16 years. That kind of appreciation doesn't happen unless demand is chasing limited supply.
"It became scarce along this journey because of demand," Woo emphasized. In other words, scarcity isn't just about how many coins exist—it's about how badly people want them relative to availability.
What About Other Cryptos?
Pellegrini then posed an interesting follow-up: If we're using price appreciation as the measure, does that make Ethereum (ETH) and Solana (SOL) scarce too?
Woo didn't dodge the question. "Yes in relative terms," he replied. "Scarcity in these networks are demand driven given the supply is mainly fixed."
That's a pretty democratic view of scarcity. If demand is strong and supply is capped or predictable, you've got scarcity—whether it's Bitcoin, Ethereum, or something else.
The Bigger Picture
Bitcoin has a hard cap of 21 million coins, with issuance gradually decreasing through halving events. That predictable supply schedule is central to its value proposition.
But the scarcity debate isn't new. Economist Peter Schiff questioned Bitcoin's exclusivity earlier this year, pointing out that anyone can create a digital asset with fixed supply on a blockchain like Solana. So what makes Bitcoin special?
Some users countered that fixed supply only matters when paired with sufficient decentralization. In other words, artificial scarcity is easy to create, but trustworthy scarcity? That's harder.
Price Action: At the time of writing, Bitcoin (BTC) was trading at $91,203.04, up 0.09% in the last 24 hours.