A. Origin
Building on the history of payment networks and the technical promise of the Lightning Network, it becomes clear that Bitcoin represents more than just a new "coin" or a speculative asset. When viewed through the lens of economic theory and social impact, Bitcoin is emerging as a digital public good: a global, open-source infrastructure for value that functions much like the internet did for information.
B. Story: The Case for Bitcoin as a Public Good
In economics, a public good is defined by two primary characteristics: it is non-excludable (you can’t stop people from using it) and non-rivalrous (one person’s use doesn’t diminish another’s). While Bitcoin tokens themselves are rivalrous (if I spend a bitcoin, you can't spend that same one), the Bitcoin Network—the underlying protocol and ledger—functions as a public utility.
1. Open-Access Infrastructure
Unlike the legacy "Visa/Mastercard" rails, which act as private "Club Goods," Bitcoin is truly open-access.
- The Legacy Model: Access to the global financial system is a privilege granted by banks. If you live in a "high-risk" region or lack a formal ID, you are excluded. This is the "Gatekeeper Tax."
- The Bitcoin Model: No one can "ban" a user from the Bitcoin network. As long as you have an internet connection, you can participate. It is a neutral, borderless infrastructure that does not care about your nationality, credit score, or political standing.
2. Non-Excludable Settlement
When a transaction is broadcast to the Bitcoin network, it enters a public "mempool." While users pay a fee to prioritize their transactions, the protocol itself does not discriminate based on the nature of the transaction. This neutrality is a public good because it provides a baseline of financial certainty that private networks—subject to censorship or corporate policy changes—cannot offer.
The Role of the Lightning Network: Solving the "Rivalry" Problem
Standard public goods often suffer from the "Tragedy of the Commons" or congestion. If too many people use a bridge at once, it becomes useless. The Bitcoin base layer (Layer 1) has a similar "rivalry" issue: space in a block is limited, leading to high fees during peak demand.
The Lightning Network transforms Bitcoin into a more perfect public good by making its use nearly non-rivalrous.
- Infinite Throughput: By moving transactions into off-chain "payment channels," the network can theoretically handle millions of transactions per second.
- Marginal Cost of Zero: As the network grows, the cost of routing a payment through the Lightning "mesh" drops toward zero. It becomes a shared resource that provides more value as more people join (a positive network effect).
Financial Inclusion: The Social Utility
A public good is ultimately judged by its benefit to society. For the 1.4 billion "unbanked" people globally, Bitcoin isn't a digital gold—it’s a digital lifeline.
| Traditional Finance (Private) | Bitcoin + Lightning (Public) |
|---|---|
| High Entry Barrier: Requires ID, physical branch, and minimum balance. | Zero Entry Barrier: Requires only a smartphone and a free app. |
| Opaque Fees: Hidden exchange rates and "middleman" takes. | Transparent Fees: Fees are visible and dictated by the market, not a CEO. |
| Slow Settlement: Remittances take days to clear across borders. | Instant Finality: Money moves at the speed of light, 24/7/365. |
The "Internet of Money"
Just as the HTTP protocol (the public good of the web) allowed anyone to start a blog or a store without asking permission from a newspaper or a mall, Bitcoin allows anyone to build a financial service. Whether it is a micro-tipping service for content creators or a cross-border remittance app for migrant workers, the "rails" are already there, free for anyone to build upon.
Conclusion: A Utility for the 21st Century
The history of payment innovation from 1949 to today was the history of better marketing for the same private clubs. Bitcoin breaks that cycle. By providing a decentralized, secure, and open-source ledger, it offers a Global Public Utility for Value. It is the "hard truth" of the 21st century: we no longer need to rely on the 1940s infrastructure because we have built a digital commons that belongs to everyone and no one at the same time.