Would Friedman Burn your Tokens?
Aggelos Kiayias,
Philip Lazos and
Jan Christoph Schlegel
Papers from arXiv.org
Abstract:
Cryptocurrencies come with a variety of tokenomic policies as well as aspirations of desirable monetary characteristics that have been described by proponents as 'sound money' or even 'ultra sound money.' These propositions are typically devoid of economic analysis so it is a pertinent question how such aspirations fit in the wider context of monetary economic theory. In this work, we develop a framework that determines the optimal token supply policy of a cryptocurrency, as well as investigate how such policy may be algorithmically implemented. Our findings suggest that the optimal policy complies with the Friedman rule and it is dependent on the risk free rate, as well as the growth of the cryptocurrency platform. Furthermore, we demonstrate a wide set of conditions under which such policy can be implemented via contractions and expansions of token supply that can be realized algorithmically with block rewards, taxation of consumption and burning the proceeds, and blockchain oracles.
Date: 2023-06
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-mon and nep-pay
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:arx:papers:2306.17025
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