After a discussion with others in the Ethereum community on economic parameters, some of us feel a reduction in maximum issuance for ETH2 would be appropriate.
The current parameters are set for a curve approximated by this table:
| Staked |
Issued |
Inflation |
ROI |
| 1,000,000 |
181,019 |
0.17% |
18.10% |
| 3,000,000 |
313,534 |
0.30% |
10.45% |
| 10,000,000 |
572,433 |
0.54% |
5.72% |
| 30,000,000 |
991,483 |
0.94% |
3.30% |
| 100,000,000 |
1,810,193 |
1.71% |
1.81% |
This results in a maximum theoretical issuance of slightly below 2% for year 1.
Given that Ethereum exists in competition with other platforms and that an overall approach to security budget termed "minimum necessary issuance" or "minimum viable issuance" is the guiding principle, we would suggest an adjustment to these parameters.
First, we would recommend leaving the current issuance in place for ETH staked less than or equal to 10 million Ether. For amounts greater than 10 million staked ETH, we suggest bending the issuance curve down so that maximum theoretical issuance is slightly below 1% (actual issuance will be lower, and fee burns will reduce it further).
The revised table would look something like:
| Staked |
Issued |
Inflation |
ROI |
| 1,000,000 |
181,019 |
0.17% |
18.10% |
| 3,000,000 |
313,534 |
0.30% |
10.45% |
| 10,000,000 |
572,433 |
0.54% |
5.72% |
| 30,000,000 |
742,043 |
0.70% |
2.47% |
| 100,000,000 |
954,055 |
0.90% |
0.95% |
This change in the curve accomplishes two goals:
-
It does not reduce security payments until 10,000,000 ETH are staked, thereby not affecting total security until that milestone is reached. Ten million ETH staked is substantially more than any researchers have argued is necessary to secure Ethereum.
-
It reduces the maximum security budget for Ethereum below 1%, regardless of how many people choose to stake. This is important as Ethereum is in competition with other crypto systems for users and capital. A maximum of 1% security budget provides a good Schelling point for a tangible maximum for "Minimum Necessary Issuance" that increases Ethereum's credibility in the marketplace.
-
Many existing proof-of-stake crypto blockchains have total percent of tokens staked at 50% or more of token supply. This change protects Ethereum from dilution even if very large amounts of Ether are staked.
Since the phase zero specification is locked and various testnets are in place, and phase zero ETH staked is likely to be less than 10 million ETH, it is recommended that this change to issuance is added to the phase 1 spec and gets deployed with the phase 1 release.
After a discussion with others in the Ethereum community on economic parameters, some of us feel a reduction in maximum issuance for ETH2 would be appropriate.
The current parameters are set for a curve approximated by this table:
This results in a maximum theoretical issuance of slightly below 2% for year 1.
Given that Ethereum exists in competition with other platforms and that an overall approach to security budget termed "minimum necessary issuance" or "minimum viable issuance" is the guiding principle, we would suggest an adjustment to these parameters.
First, we would recommend leaving the current issuance in place for ETH staked less than or equal to 10 million Ether. For amounts greater than 10 million staked ETH, we suggest bending the issuance curve down so that maximum theoretical issuance is slightly below 1% (actual issuance will be lower, and fee burns will reduce it further).
The revised table would look something like:
This change in the curve accomplishes two goals:
It does not reduce security payments until 10,000,000 ETH are staked, thereby not affecting total security until that milestone is reached. Ten million ETH staked is substantially more than any researchers have argued is necessary to secure Ethereum.
It reduces the maximum security budget for Ethereum below 1%, regardless of how many people choose to stake. This is important as Ethereum is in competition with other crypto systems for users and capital. A maximum of 1% security budget provides a good Schelling point for a tangible maximum for "Minimum Necessary Issuance" that increases Ethereum's credibility in the marketplace.
Many existing proof-of-stake crypto blockchains have total percent of tokens staked at 50% or more of token supply. This change protects Ethereum from dilution even if very large amounts of Ether are staked.
Since the phase zero specification is locked and various testnets are in place, and phase zero ETH staked is likely to be less than 10 million ETH, it is recommended that this change to issuance is added to the phase 1 spec and gets deployed with the phase 1 release.