Ethereum and Bitcoin Halving: A Convergent Path to Deflation



Bitcoin's halving mechanism was introduced in 2009, reducing the mining reward by half every 210k blocks to strictly cap the total supply at 21 million coins. This hard-coded deflationary design, with supply sharply decreasing every four years, continuously reinforces its scarcity as digital gold. Historical data shows that each halving triggers a super bull run, as the sharp reduction in miner sell pressure resonates with rising market expectations, pushing the price to new all-time highs.

After completing the merge in 2022, Ethereum completely abandoned the proof-of-work mechanism, and its halving logic also fundamentally changed. Currently, ETH issuance is no longer tied to block production but is dynamically adjusted based on the number of validator nodes and network activity. When network transaction fees exceed the base issuance, Ethereum enters a deflationary state, effectively achieving an implicit halving. This design gives ETH greater supply flexibility, allowing it to automatically regulate inflation based on market conditions and avoid the sharp volatility seen with Bitcoin halving.

The differences in their halving mechanisms reflect underlying philosophical distinctions. Bitcoin pursues absolute scarcity and decentralized security, while Ethereum emphasizes ecosystem prosperity and sustainable development. However, in the long term, both aim to capture value through supply control, ultimately pointing toward the goal of deflationary crypto assets. In the context of global liquidity easing, this anti-inflation design makes them important tools for investors to hedge against fiat currency devaluation.
ETH-0,31%
BTC-0,38%
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