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Bitcoin: A Natural Oligopoly

Information Technology Convergence and Services (ITCS), 2018
Abstract

Although Bitcoin was intended to be a decentralized digital currency, in practice, mining power is quite concentrated. This fact is a persistent source of concern for the Bitcoin community. We provide an explanation using a simple model to capture miners' incentives to invest in equipment. In our model, nn miners compete for a prize of fixed size. Each miner chooses an investment qiq_i, incurring cost ciqic_i q_i, and then receives reward qiαjqjα\frac{q_i^\alpha}{\sum_j q_j^\alpha}, for some α1\alpha \geq 1. When ci=cjc_i = c_j for all i,ji,j, and α=1\alpha = 1, there is a unique equilibrium where all miners invest equally. However, we prove that under seemingly mild deviations from this model, equilibrium outcomes become drastically more centralized. In particular, (a) When costs are asymmetric, if miner ii chooses to invest, then miner jj has market share at least 1cjci1-\frac{c_j}{c_i}. That is, if miner jj has costs that are (e.g.) 20%20\% lower than those of miner ii, then miner jj must control at least 20%20\% of the \emph{total} mining power. (b) In the presence of economies of scale (α>1\alpha > 1), every market participant has a market share of at least 11α1-\frac{1}{\alpha}, implying that the market features at most αα1\frac{\alpha}{\alpha - 1} miners in total. We discuss the implications of our results for the future design of cryptocurrencies. In particular, our work further motivates the study of protocols that minimize "orphaned" blocks, proof-of-stake protocols, and incentive compatible protocols.

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