A new proposal by Vitalik Buterin, the creator of ethereum, suggests he is considering increasing rewards for validators who would secure the operation of the next version of the worldâs second-largest blockchain.
Ethereum 2.0 is by far the biggest upgrade on the horizon for the ethereum blockchain, today valued at $17.5 billion. Its broader goal is to erase ongoing bottlenecks to transaction throughput and significantly decrease costs on the network.
Rather than relying on a proof-of-work consensus protocol whereby miners compete to bundle together blocks of transactions and add them to the ever-growing chain, ethereum 2.0 will rely on a proof-of-stake consensus protocol whereby validators stake their own funds and attest to blocks and transactions being created on the network.
As such, the security of the ethereum 2.0 network is reliant not upon enormous amounts of computational energy but rather enormous amounts of staked wealth.
âIn a proof-of-stake system, your cost of attack is just buying tokens. You basically want it to be unreasonable that anyone would be able to buy so much tokens that theyâre able to attack the network,â Fredrik Harryson, CTO of ethereum software client Parity, explained.
As proposed by Ethereum Foundation researcher Justin Drake in recent days, the targeted amount of staked wealth on the network is around 32 million ETHÂ (by todayâs estimates, that would be valued at $5 billion.) And based on that amount of targeted staked wealth, roughly $160 million in ETH could be earned annually by the entities that would, as planned, replace the networkâs current ecosystem of transaction miners.
But how do you get that much value set aside in order to keep the network secure? In order to incentivize that kind of behavior, ethereum developers need to set a return rate â akin to an interest rate â that rewards validators who lock up their ETH and contribute to the security of the blockchain.
âThey have to find a number that is appropriate. You donât want to overpay to secure the chain and you donât want to underpay,â Jonny Rhea, a protocol engineer at ConsenSys, explained to CoinDesk. âSo, the idea was they did some back of the envelope kind of math to figure out whatâs it going to be worth and what should we pay to secure the chain which we pay the validators.â
Originally, this âback of the envelope mathâ suggested the interest rate should be roughly 2.20 percent given an overall amount of 30 million ETH staked on the network.
Should staked ETH numbers drop, this rate of return would increase to incentivize more validators to come online. Should staked ETH numbers rise, this rate of return would decrease to ensure the network is not overpaying its validators for their work.
As Harrysson explained:
âThereâs a sliding scale of rewards that depends on how much ETH is locked up in stake. In a system where you have very small amounts of stake locked up, you want to encourage more people to stake and lock up more ETH to increase the security of the chain.â
However, estimations presented by Collin Myers, a token strategist for ConsenSys, back in January suggested that the present rate of return for ethereum 2.0 validators was simply far too low.
Taking into account the minimum staking requirement of 32 ETH, computing costs, code risk, general uptime and maintenance costs, and more, Myers concluded the current ethereum 2.0 specifications resulted in net yields âthat are highly unlikely to attract a small validator.â Rhea adds that the same conclusion was reiterated by âseveral different peopleâ including miners and financial experts in the ethereum community.
The latest proposal, submitted this week by Vitalik Buterin, the founder of ethereum, suggests bumping up the rate of return to 3.30 percent given an overall amount of 30 million ETH staked on the network.
This would mean that ethereum 2.0 validators collectively would receive a maximum annual reward issuance of close to 100,000 ETH, which by todayâs estimates would be worth around $160 million.
By comparison, mining on ethereum today is estimated to be a nearly $700 million annual industry.
As such, compared to mining on ethereum, the targeted valuation of validating on ethereum is considerably lower. At the same time, so is the overall inflation rate of ETH.
âThe base inflation would be ~1 percent and the base return [rate] ~3.2 percent,â estimated ethereum researcher Justin Drake in response to Buterinâs proposal. At present, the inflation rate on ethereum is just over 4 percent.
Counting into this dynamic additional gas costs which on the current ethereum network can be thought of similarly to the costs of writing transactions into a mined block, Drake adds:
âWith half of the gas burnt, then inflation [on ethereum 2.0] would be ~0.5 percent and the validator return ~5 percent. Feels healthy!â
In Buterinâs proposal, the validator return rate can be as high as 18.10 percent if only 1 million ETH are staked in the network to as low as 1.56 percent if thereâs over 100 million ETH staked in the network.
âItâs more like behavioral economics,â Harrysson told CoinDesk. âItâs a subjective measure of what you want your cost of attack to be. So, the question you always ask yourself in blockchain is how much would it cost to attack this chain?â
These estimations that Buterin has proposed are by no means set in stone. The work going into determining the reward issuance structure, Rhea tells CoinDesk, is like trying to âtarget the sweet spotâ between validator profitability and network security.
Rhea concluded:
âFor now, [Buterinâs proposal] is what itâs going to be but itâs being put out as a proposal. People are going to go back to the drawing board. I know Collin Myers from Consensys this weekend is going to rerun his analysis based on [the new numbers] and heâll probably have some interesting feedback.â
Drawing board image via Shutterstock