{"id":70793,"date":"2016-07-25T22:21:55","date_gmt":"2016-07-25T22:21:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.dash.org\/uncategorized\/a-tale-of-two-networks\/"},"modified":"2021-09-23T15:02:44","modified_gmt":"2021-09-23T15:02:44","slug":"a-tale-of-two-networks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.dash.org\/blog\/a-tale-of-two-networks\/","title":{"rendered":"A Tale Of Two Networks"},"content":{"rendered":"

As the head of finance for Dash, I naturally spend a lot of time thinking about Dash\u2019s strategy, funding and expenses and how to optimize them for our network\u2019s growth.<\/p>\n

About a week ago, I did the unthinkable\u2026 I replied to a troll on Bitcointalk. I know, I know, \u201cjust push the \u2018ignore\u2019 button\u201d, you say. However, this particular troll was describing our model as \u201ctaxing the miners\u201d and it got me thinking, and that got me typing.<\/p>\n

After posting a response, a number of people reached out to me \u2014 both privately and publicly \u2014 to let me know they found my perspective valuable on the issue of \u201ctaxation\u201d, and to encourage me to write something more formal and comprehensive on the topic.<\/p>\n

Trolls aside, this is not the first time I have encountered criticism of our funding model. I suspect many people in the digital currency field have an issue with splitting the block rewards between different needs the way we do. But why is there such widespread skepticism?<\/p>\n

Bitcoin allocates 100% of their block rewards toward miners, which I suspect has established a paradigm in the minds of many in the digital currency industry that block rewards belong <\/em><\/strong>to the miners. Any attempt to allocate them any differently is therefore a tax<\/em><\/strong> on miners. This viewpoint is so pervasive in the digital currency field that the industry jargon for block rewards is \u201cmining rewards\u201d.<\/p>\n

This paradigm \u2014 that all block rewards inherently belong to the miners \u2014 is a false one, and it is holding the entire industry back from dramatic potential progress. I\u2019ll get into the reasons why in a moment, but first let me explain an alternative point of view, one that I believe the entire industry needs to embrace.<\/p>\n

What\u2019s a little taxation between friends?<\/strong><\/p>\n

First, let\u2019s frame who is really being \u201ctaxed\u201d in any blockchain that increases available supply over time. It\u2019s actually the users<\/em><\/strong> of the currency. Why?<\/p>\n

When a government needs to raise funds, it can directly collect money from its citizens and corporations in various ways\u2026 fees for licenses and permits, income tax, property fees, et cetera. These are all taxes of one form or another. But there is another way that many governments tax their populace\u2026 by issuing new money.<\/p>\n

When a central bank prints money, especially in large numbers, the increased supply doesn\u2019t actually increase the value of all currency in circulation. It simply proportionally dilutes the value of the currency in circulation, and shifts that portion of the value to the central bank\u2019s newly printed money. In essence, this is a tax on the holders of a country\u2019s currency. In most countries, the effect is rather subtle, perhaps 2% per year. But in extreme cases, like Zimbabwe, inflation has eroded nearly 100% of the value of existing currency and the above described effect is impossible to escape notice. Today, the Zimbabwean 100 trillion dollar bill isn\u2019t worth the paper it\u2019s printed on.<\/p>\n

In the case of Bitcoin and other digital currencies, therefore, the creation of new currency is an effective tax on all holders of the currency (currently at a rate of about 4% per year). The network itself is the beneficiary of the newly \u201cprinted\u201d currency. In the case of Bitcoin, the network protocol just happens to state that the tax should be allocated 100% to miners<\/em><\/strong>.<\/p>\n

No such thing as overkill, right? Right?!?<\/strong><\/p>\n

The questions every user of Bitcoin and other digital currencies should be asking, therefore, is \u201cAre my taxes being spent effectively to provide me with the most value? If not, how should it be spent?\u201d<\/p>\n

Bitcoin and most other digital currencies have explicitly decided that network security is the only expense worth receiving these taxes. In doing so, their protocol implies that the value of any incremental transactional security that can be funded \u2014 no matter how expensive it is or how little incremental security it provides \u2014 is worthwhile. In effect, transactional security:<\/p>\n