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I've been thinking about a question many people ask: how much money is there in the world really? The answer is more fascinating than it seems, and it has direct implications for understanding why Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies have so much room to grow.
Let's look at the numbers. Physical cash (bills and coins) circulate approximately $9 trillion. It sounds like a lot, but it's just the tip of the iceberg. When we add simple bank deposits, we reach about $100 trillion, and including investment funds and large deposits, the figure rises to $150 trillion in real money.
The interesting part is the distribution. The United States dominates with nearly $62 trillion, that is, almost half of the world's money. China follows with $16 trillion, and Japan rounds out the top three with $6.5 trillion. This gives you a clear perspective on who truly controls the global financial flows.
Now, if you compare this to total financial assets (stocks, bonds, derivatives), those do exceed a quintillion dollars. But here’s the crucial point: that’s no longer money, it’s valuations. The real money, the actual existing cash, is that $150 trillion.
For those arguing that there isn’t enough money for Bitcoin to continue its growth, these numbers speak for themselves. When you see how much money is in the world and how it’s concentrated, you understand there’s more than enough liquidity available. The real question isn’t whether there’s money, but where it will flow. And as long as the main economic players maintain their current strategies, interest in alternative assets like cryptocurrencies will keep growing. It’s worth paying attention to these movements.