Token Economics Design for Self-Sustaining Decentralized Networks
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.63345/wjftcse.v1.i4.206Keywords:
Token economics; decentralized networks; incentive design; token emission; clinical trial research; blockchain governance.Abstract
Token economics—the design of incentive mechanisms using native tokens—plays a pivotal role in fostering sustainable behavior within decentralized networks. As blockchain-based ecosystems grow increasingly complex, the alignment of participant incentives with network goals becomes crucial to long-term viability. This manuscript investigates the theoretical foundations, empirical evidence, and practical considerations of token economics design geared toward self-sustaining decentralized networks. We begin with an overview of core concepts in incentive compatibility, game theory, and mechanism design, followed by a critical literature review that synthesizes prevailing design patterns and unresolved challenges. To ground these theories in real-world application, we report on a novel clinical trial–style research study in which over 300 participants engaged with a purpose-built decentralized platform employing varied token emission schedules and staking rewards. The methodology section details the randomized assignment of incentive structures, data collection procedures, and statistical analysis plan. Results demonstrate that token models featuring dynamic emission rates and community-governance–driven reward adjustments significantly outperformed static models in user retention, contribution quality, and on-chain activity. The conclusion distills best practices for practitioners and outlines avenues for future research, emphasizing the need for adaptive mechanisms, robust governance frameworks, and cross-disciplinary collaboration.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.