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Ethereum's Low Fees Are Breaking Its Economic Model

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Release: 2024-08-20 21:08:11
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Transactions on the top smart contract network now cost less than $0.10, while tokens swaps can be done for less than a dollar. That's in stark contrast with the $100

Ethereum's Low Fees Are Breaking Its Economic Model

A version of this article appeared in our The Decentralised newsletter on August 20. Sign up here.

GM, Tim here.

Here are some recent DeFi developments that caught my eye:

Ethereum fees hit record lows — and it’s causing problems

Transaction fees on Ethereum are now the lowest they’ve ever been — and that’s having some undesired effects.

Transactions on the top smart contract network now cost less than $0.10, while tokens swaps can be done for less than a dollar.

That’s in stark contrast with the $100 plus fees that plagued users during the 2021 crypto bull run.

Fees are so low that Etherscan’s Ethereum Gas Tracker, a popular way to check transaction costs, has started reporting fees in decimals.

Ethereum gas fees are now shown to three decimal places (Etherscan.io)

The reason for the low fees is that activity has moved over to layer 2s — separate blockchains built on top of Ethereum that offer much faster and cheaper transactions.

Ethereum’s March Dencun upgrade juiced the cost savings layer 2s can offer, accelerating their adoption.

But there’s a problem: The low fees are breaking Ethereum’s economic model.

Ethereum no longer destroys — or “burns” — more Ether tokens than it creates.

In other words, its economics are now inflationary — a dirty word among crypto users who often revile the money printing ingrained in the traditional financial system.

“The meme of ‘ultra sound money’ is broken,” Ethereum core developer Preston Van Loon told DL News.

AEUR stablecoin faces problems as bank goes bust

Anchored Coins AG, the Swiss company that issues the euro-pegged stablecoin AEUR, has paused withdrawals, leaving holders in the lurch.

The reason? The bank where Anchored Coins kept part of the reserves backing its $63 million stablecoin — FlowBank — has gone bankrupt.

It’s not yet clear whether the stablecoin issuer can recover the collateral.

But if it can’t, Anchored Coins said in a statement, losses would be socialised among all AEUR holders, per Swiss law.

Anchored Coins did not respond to a request for comment.

For now, the funds are in limbo until authorities appoint a liquidator to oversee the return of deposits to creditors ― a process that could take time.

FlowBank’s bankruptcy isn’t the only crisis the stablecoin issuer has suffered in recent times.

Binance paused AEUR trading in December, four days after its initial listing on the exchange because the token soared 200% to $3.25 ― an unusual occurrence for a stablecoin.

The crypto exchange attributed the token’s upward depeg to factors including “users who might not have realised its standing as a stablecoin.”

DAO voter apathy poses a threat to Arbitrum treasury

Members of the Arbitrum DAO are voting on key changes to its native token, ARB, to protect its treasury from hostile takeover.

The proposals are designed to address voter apathy among DAO members.

They include making the ARB token stakable, and potentially diverting a portion of the blockchain’s profits to ARB holders.

A decline in DAO participation poses a very real danger, according to pseudonymous Arbitrum DAO delegate Frisson.

“It is becoming economically attractive for a malicious actor to launch a governance attack on the DAO treasury,” he said in a post on the Arbitrum governance forum.

A governance attack is where a coordinated group buy up a DAO’s token and vote to push through changes that benefit them — often at the expense of the protocol’s users.

Other DAOs have already been attacked in this way.

In July, Compound, an Ethereum-based lending protocol, was the target of a $25 million governance attack.

The DAO managing the Ethereum Name Service, a protocol that lets users turn their crypto addresses names and titles, is also fighting off attacks.

Data of the week

Tron is the only blockchain to see an increase in trading volume over the past seven days.

Sunpump.meme, a copy of the Solana-based memecoin generator pump.fun, recently launched on the blockchain.

Tron transaction volume is up 36% this week. (DefiLlama)

This week in DeFi governance

CoW DAO votes on Wintermute liquidity deal for its COW token

Arbitrum DAO mulls new conflict of interest policies

Solana stablecoin protocol UXD is shutting down

Post of the week

Polygon Chief Information Security Officer Mudit Gupta riffs on the serious issue of DeFi protocols unknowingly hiring North Korean developers.

Found the perfect spot for next Devcon.Most devs are apparently based there anyway so less travel on average. pic.twitter.com/kUAp9HZgYL

Found the perfect spot for next Devcon.Most devs are apparently based there anyway so less travel on

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