Bitcoin: Would you want to get paid in cryptocurrency?

in #bitcoin7 years ago

imageBitcoin. Lots of people are talking about, but very few own it.
So how would you feel about getting paid in the high profile cryptocurrency?
From early next year, staff at Japanese internet firm GMO Group will be among the latest to find out how that feels.
More than 4,000 employees are being given the option to receive a portion of their salary in Bitcoin.
Critics say it is a marketing stunt, announced at a time when global interest in the financial technology has never been higher.
It also carries risks: the volatile currency slumped last week but has since rebounded by more than 50%.
But what will it really mean for employer and employee?

imageHow does it work?
Bitcoin salaries are usually paid according to the digital currency's value at an agreed date and time.
To keep the numbers simple, if the Bitcoin price was $10,000 and an employee opted to have $1,000 in the digital currency, they would receive 0.1 Bitcoin.
Employees who choose to sell right away would receive the same in cash as they would have been paid (so long as they had arranged for the sale to happen in advance).
But holding onto the cryptocurrency, be it for a day, a week or a year, would see its value go up or go down. That $1,000 may end up being worth $5,000. Or potentially next to nothing.
And so some argue that paying wages in Bitcoin effectively encourages people to gamble.

"If an employee is receiving their salary in Bitcoin, they might as well be receiving lottery tickets", said Massimo Massa, professor of finance at INSEAD.
"They are just participating in a game."
Staff must be made aware that "there's no guarantee that its price will rise and there's no intrinsic value because there's nothing to back it up", he said, adding such schemes could never be compulsory. image
Is Bitcoin the only option?
The digital payment industry is expanding, with new digital currencies emerging all the time.
At the Singapore based blockchain company TenX, staff usually have their base salary paid into their bank accounts, but their monthly bonus is paid in Pay tokens, the firm's own digital currency.
The tokens, which can be traded on digital exchanges, were issued in an initial coin offering in June, allowing the company to raise $80m.
TenX co-founder and president, Julian Hosp, said it did not make sense to buy Bitcoin to pay bonuses when the company already had its own currency.
Paying bonuses in tokens can incentivises staff as Pay's value should rise in line with the company's success, Mr Hosp added. imageTenX community manager, Mike Ferrer, has gone further and opted to receive part of his base salary in Pay, on top of his monthly bonus.
The 32-year-old has been investing in cryptocurrencies for some time, and accepts that there are huge risks, but says he only invests what he can afford.
"I visualise myself throwing in a pile of money and watching it burn in front of me, and if I can't feel comfortable with that then I know I've over invested", Mr Ferrer said.

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