Chapter 13: Economic Model and Minting Logic

13.1 MeriToken Is Not a Currency

To reiterate MeriToken's economic positioning:

  • Non-tradable, non-exchangeable
  • No speculative value
  • Not a medium of exchange
  • Purely a measure of contribution and a carrier of voting power

Therefore, the constraints of traditional monetary economics (inflation control, monetary policy) do not apply to MeriToken.

13.2 Minting Approach Selection

Three approaches were evaluated during discussion:

ApproachDescriptionAdvantagesDisadvantages
Fixed supplyPreset capSimpleIncreasing difficulty for latecomers, unfair
Periodic quotaFixed minting amount per periodControls total supplyContributions become a zero-sum game
Uncapped + decay self-balancingMint on demand, decay automatically burnsFair, no latecomer disadvantageRequires precise decay model

Choice: Uncapped Minting + Decay Self-Balancing

Rationale:

  • Merit is not a currency; it does not need scarcity to maintain value
  • It represents "current active contribution level"; decay guarantees this
  • Avoids unfair disadvantages for latecomers
  • Voting power is based on share; changes in total supply do not affect governance fairness

13.3 Why Over-Issuance Will Not Occur

Key question raised during discussion: Merit is created from nothing—won't it be over-issued?

Answer:

  1. Decay is a natural burn mechanism: old MeriToken continuously decays
  2. Dynamic equilibrium: when minting rate = decay rate, total supply tends toward stability
  3. Share determines voting power: even if total supply increases, individual voting power depends on share rather than absolute value
  4. Analogy: academic citation counts have no cap, but the influence of older papers naturally decays—the system self-balances

13.4 Dynamic Equilibrium

Steady State

When user count is stable: total network MeriToken ≈ constant

Growth Phase

New users increase → total supply grows → but per-capita tends toward stability → voting power shares are naturally diluted

Decline Phase

Active users decrease → minting decreases while decay continues → total supply drops → remaining active users' shares increase

13.5 Initial Allocation

  • Registration grants MeriToken = e ≈ 2.718
  • Initial minMerit = e
  • Ensures every new user has basic participation capability
  • e is small enough not to significantly dilute existing users, yet large enough to guarantee basic participation rights

13.6 Incentive Analysis

MeriToken is non-tradable, but the incentives it provides are:

IncentiveDescription
Voting powerInfluence in community decision-making
Social recognitionHigh MeriToken = high credibility
Priority accessPreferential allocation of certain resources or opportunities
Legacy valueCan be partially passed on to descendants

In the post-currency era, social recognition and voting power are themselves the strongest incentives.

13.7 Discussion Notes

Core insights of the economic model:

  • MeriToken is not a currency and does not need the constraints of monetary economics
  • Decay is the most elegant "burn" mechanism—no human intervention needed, naturally self-balancing
  • Voting power based on share means changes in total supply do not affect governance fairness
  • The core advantage of this model: simplicity, self-balancing, fairness
  • No complex "monetary policy" is needed to maintain stability