Discovering and Developing The Blockchain Cryptoeconomy
Discovering and Developing The Blockchain Cryptoeconomy
Discovering and Developing The Blockchain Cryptoeconomy
blockchain cryptoeconomy
Darcy WE Allen
Dr Darcy Allen is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Public Affairs and a Research Assistant at the
Blockchain Innovation Hub at RMIT University, Melbourne. email: darcywilliamallen@gmail.com
1 This paper is heavily based on a chapter in my PhD dissertation, The Private Governance of
2 As Leeson and Boettke (2009, p. 252) note: “Conventional discussions of entrepreneurship focus on
entrepreneurship at a “lower tier” of economic activity— entrepreneurial activity within a given
institutional framework.”
3 As outlined in Leeson and Boettke (2009, p. 253): “Productive-tier entrepreneurship is “concerned with
investments that improve productivity (innovation) and better service consumer needs (arbitrage)” while
protective-tier entrepreneurship is “concerned with the creation of protective technologies that secure
citizens’ private property rights vis-à-vis one another (governance).”
This paper proceeds as follows. Section 2 outlines the economics of using blockchain
technology as a tool for secession as an economic problem of institutional entrepreneurship.
This analysis is facilitated through case studies of blockchain secession to demonstrate that
entrepreneurs must develop novel institutional mechanisms to facilitate exchange outside the
scope of territorial governments. Section 3 uses the insights from new development economics
to re-define the economics of the blockchain entrepreneurial problem as an economic
development problem of non-price coordination of information about the complementarities of
blockchain institutions. Section 4 concludes.
3
rule systems or protocols, can together be described as forming a new decentralised economy
called the crypto-economy.
The crypto-economy does not have a geographic location, or centralised political structure
or legal system. Rather, the crypto-economy is defined as using “cryptographic techniques to
constrain behaviour (in place of using trusted third parties)” (Babbitt and Dietz 2014, p. 1). At
first glance the crypto-economy appears similar to other techno-economic paradigms such as
the peer-to-peer (Benkler 2006) or sharing economy (Allen and Berg 2014). The crypto-
economy is unique, however, because it involves non-territorial political exit away from the
institutions of the state, such as the law and courts.4 This section focuses on the political
economy context of the entrepreneurial application of blockchain technology—by either
integrating blockchains within existing institutions, or as a tool to politically exit from them. My
aim is to provide a greater understanding of the economic problem of crypto-secession, which is
then examined through the lens of new development economics in Section 3.
There are two broad types of blockchain application. First, blockchains can be integrated
within the existing institutions and organisations of territorial economies (e.g. firms) while
maintaining public protective-tier technologies (e.g. courts). New technologies are generally
applied or integrated within the existing institutional architecture of the territorial state. The
steam engine, for instance, did not seek to provide new enforcement or institutional structures;
it was gradually integrated into the existing institutions of trade such as the courts, price
mechanisms and private property. Second, and in contrast, blockchains can be used by
entrepreneurs as a technology for political exit or secession through the creation of private
protective-tier technologies. Indeed, the unique feature of blockchain is that it allows non-
territorial secession away from institutional systems. That is, while blockchains can be
integrated within existing firms, markets and states, they can also be used to secede from, and
thereby compete with, political institutions as a private protective-tier technology (see Leeson
and Boettke 2009). If the latter path is taken by the entrepreneur, they must discover and apply
blockchain cryptographic code as an institutional enforcement mechanism that does not
maintain recourse to the institutions of territorial states. While the core focus of the present
4The crypto-economy is best viewed as a catallaxy. Just as the organisation of industry is “dense network
of co-operation and affiliation by which firms are inter-related” (Richardson 1972, p. 883), the crypto-
economy is an order of networks and complementarities between individuals exchanging across different
blockchains. The spontaneous ordering of crypto-economy exchange is generated by the complex and
competing interactions of individuals and organisations operating within the constraints of blockchain
technology. This draws heavily from the ‘catallaxy’ definition by Hayek (2012).
4
paper is on the entrepreneurial problem of seceding—that is, of creating the new frontier
crypto-economy—it is useful to begin by briefly outlining the political economy choice by the
entrepreneur to secede or to integrate.
One unique functional feature of blockchain—and that which I will argue later presents a
higher-order entrepreneurial problem to solve—is the use of blockchain technology for political
exit or secession. This process of crypto-secession is an entrepreneurial one, involving the
development of self-enforcing institutions facilitated by cryptographic technology (MacDonald
2015). Entrepreneurs may apply blockchain in an attempt to push economic exchange away
from centralised organisations towards decentralised economic systems (Buterin 2015). Here,
blockchains are not integrated into the public protective institutions, they compete with them.
Where blockchains are comparatively effective at solving economic problems—that is, where
they more effectively economise on transaction costs—individuals engaging in economic
exchange will exit from existing institutions and move towards decentralised private
blockchain-based institutions.5 This form of political rupture occurs because blockchain lowers
the costs of exit by preventing opportunism, acting autonomously, and being entirely publicly
5The costs of integration within the existing political and regulatory process are subjective costs and the
political context in which blockchains emerged suggest that the costs of integration were perceived to be
high.
5
visible yet secure (MacDonald 2015).6 One way blockchains maintain their institutional
segregation or sovereignty is as autonomous agents or decentralised autonomous
organisations. Because these applications are completely autonomous and self-executing,
cannot be stopped by centralised entities. Secession is best described, as we will see below, as
form of private protective-tier entrepreneurship, and is analogous to the economic problem of
economic development.
6One of the defining aspects of smart contracts on the blockchain is that they theoretically entirely
eliminate contractual opportunism.
6
There are additional barriers to integrating blockchain rather than just technical difficulties.
In addition to technical difficulties, as is with all new technologies, regulatory uncertainty and
hostility remain problems within the application of blockchain.7 Incumbents can lobby to defend
their territory and draw blockchain technology within existing regulations. This notion of
regulatory resistance with new technologies is well known in other technologies (Tapscott and
Tapscott 2016) including when regulators are captured by incumbents with entrenched
interests who suffer future losses (Juma 2016). Combining this understanding of political
resistance with a broader ‘precautionary principle’ adopted by governments shows that the
institutional costs of integration with blockchains are increased (Thierer 2014).8 Crypto-
secession not only lowers the costs of dictatorship—by relying on code rather than the
discretionary power of governments—but can also reduce some of these political economy
costs of entrenched interests. The pseudonymity and decentralised nature of crypto-secession
may substantially increase the transaction costs of rent-seeking from others seeking to hold
back blockchain technology. One of the benefits of non-territorial crypto-secession, in this view,
is the development of a ‘permissionless innovation’ environment where entrepreneurs can
elaborate and improve applications through trial and error with few constraints (Thierer 2014,
2015). While ‘permissionless innovation’ is where agents are free to innovate without first
having to ask for permission from the state, the unique aspect of blockchain permission is that it
doesn’t stem from changing the culture of government regulation, but rather by first developing
a new jurisdiction with no coercive sovereign state.9 The institutional choice to crypto-secede,
therefore, can be seen as new form of ‘technological civil disobedience’ or even ‘spontaneous
private deregulation’ (Thierer 2016) necessitated by the regulatory pressures on blockchain
(and on governance more broadly).10
7 As Harwick (2016, p. 579) note: “In addition to the intrinsic network hurdles, regulatory uncertainty
and hostility also constitute an extrinsic hurdle for intermediation in a way that they do not for the
protocols themselves.”
8 The precautionary principle, according to Thierer (2014, p. 1), “refers to the belief that new innovations
should be curtailed or disallowed until their developers can prove that they will not cause any harm to
individuals, groups, specific entities, cultural norms, or various existing laws, norms, or traditions.”
9 One drawback from this, however, is when those experimental rules created within the crypto-economy
prove ineffective (for instance, a failed smart contract), and agents attempt to fulfil those agreements
using the conventional institutions (i.e., courts) of the formal economy. This remains an ongoing legal
issue.
10 Following Thierer (2016), civil disobedience “represents the refusal of innovators (individuals, groups,
or even corporations) or consumers to obey technology-specific laws or regulations because they find
them offensive, confusing, time-consuming, expensive, or perhaps just annoying and irrelevant.” Of
course, only time will tell whether territorially based states will, or indeed can, halt or slow the
development of blockchain technology by constraining it through regulation. Prominent examples of this
7
Crypto-seceding to the crypto-economy, however, is not institutionally costless. Crypto-
secession comes with its own set of costs. In particular there are deeper entrepreneurial costs of
crypto-secession, relating to the discovery and development of private governance enforcement
mechanisms in order to lower the transaction costs of exchange and to comparatively
outcompete the institutions within territorial economies. While on one hand crypto-secession
partially overcomes the resistance within the reigning political environment or regulation, on
the other hand the additional cost is an entrepreneurial challenge of discovering the crypto-
economy. The following examples outline some of the core challenges of entrepreneurially
crypto-seceding. These examples precede outlining this crypto-secession proto-entrepreneurial
process as facing a similar economic problem to that within ‘new development economics’
theory.
include the banning of bitcoin mining and use in Venezuela, or subtler political uncertainty on the future
of blockchain regulation.
11 There were already over 12,000 listings one month after its launch (BazaarBay 2016), and in 2016 had
been downloaded over 100,000 times (O'Connell 2016). Further, the company has received several
rounds of substantive venture capitalist funding, including prominent Andreessen Horowitz and Union
Square Ventures (Allison 2015).
12 This is centred on the idea of Ricardian contracts, where the multisig account requires two of three
8
mechanism, OpenBazaar originally employed a web of trust (WoT) model but have since moved
on to a transaction-based reputation model where the reputation of an individual is a weighted
average of their transaction ratings (Sanchez 2015).
9
the network receive their decision making power based on the value they contribute to the
network which is determined other agents in the group.13 The motivation or inspiration of the
platform is from nature, where various species have developed complex social orders based
heavily on ‘commons’ principles (Ostrom 1990). The Backfeed system, in other words, aims to
scale commons-based meritocratic rules through crypto-secession to a new value system not
determined by a manger, but by peers.14 Scaling cooperation in the commons can be
troublesome largely because of the loss of ‘reputation’ and its role as a proxy for contributions
to the group. Backfeed overcomes this problem through a ‘proof-of-work’ system where the
value of a given contribution is evaluated using the contextual information of peers.15 Those
who make contributions which are considered valuable to others will increase in reputation,
and effectively evaluating other’s contributions in line with the group also increases your
reputation. This reputation score is non-transferable and gives a level of influence to that agent.
13 The distributed private governance system of Backfeed aims to replicate stigmergic coordination found
in nature in the more complex case of human interactions and organisation.
14 One of the major problems of collective action is its ability to be scaled. Indeed, one of Elinor Ostrom’s
design rules focused on the size of the group, and so too did the work by Mancur Olson (2009) on
collective action. The size of the group matters because as the number of participants grows so too do the
transaction costs associated with cooperating. More participants make the conventional mechanisms of
collective action—particularly reputation based interactions and costly signalling—begin to fall and so
too does the effectiveness of governance.
15 Rather than a proof-of-work system (such as in Bitcoin), which relies on actions which are
algorithmically quantifiable and verifiable, Backfeed employs a proof-of-value system, which utilises the
local and distributed contextual knowledge of individuals to discover the value of contributions.
10
3. The crypto-economy as an economic development problem
Given that many blockchain entrepreneurs are crypto-seceding to the crypto-economy—such as
the examples of OpenBazaar, Ethereum and Backfeed outlined above—this section applies the
theoretical understandings from ‘new development economics’ to better understand the
economic problem of discovering and developing the decentralised crypto-economy. What we
see is that the economic problem facing blockchain entrepreneurs is analogous to the new
development economics understanding of coordinating knowledge to discover complementary
“protective-tier” institutions. Rather than this process occurring hierarchically through
government planners, such as may be the case in territorial nation states, in the case of the
crypto-economy—given the lack of government—this process may be occurring through
private governance structures, such as in the blockchain innovation commons (Allen 2017).
Therefore the application of new development economics below provides a further explanation
of the polycentric private orderings as a type of private economic development, thereby further
expanding our understanding of the private governance of entrepreneurial discovery. We can
first begin, however, by tracing the history of development economics.
The arc of thought in the economics of development ranges from the mainstream
approaches of the mid-twentieth century ‘old development economics’ (e.g. Chenery and Strout
1966; Domar 1946; Harrod 1939) to the mainline approaches of ‘new development economics’.
The resurgence of the mainline tradition of economics brought new perspectives to the
forefront of development economics. Some of the drivers of economic growth came to include
the complexity, stickiness and path dependence of both formal and informal institutions, the
epistemological limits of allocating investment through centralised governments, and the
importance of bottom-up entrepreneurial discovery for overcoming uncertainty (e.g. Bauer
1976; Boettke et al. 2008). Given that development comes through economic growth, theories of
economic growth are also theories of economic development.16 When development economics
emerged as a sub-discipline in the 1950s (see Engel 2010), the sources of economic growth
centred on the allocation, investment and accumulation of capital (see Domar 1946; Harrod
1939; Rostow 1990; Swan 1956).17 As the story went, given that developing nations had a
savings-investment gap (Chenery and Strout 1966) the key to economic development was
through increasing savings. That is, the source of economic growth for developing countries was
11
seen to come through increased foreign aid.18 The relevant question for a developing country
was, first, whether they saved enough to invest, and second, how that gap could be ameliorated
through aid or intervention. This connection between savings, capital investment and growth is
the key reason for the close relationship between development economics and government
intervention.
One example of the analytical approach of this old development economics is need for a “big
push” of state-led investment (Murphy et al. 1989; Rosenstein-Rodan 1943). While the big push
theory also attributed underdevelopment to insufficient investment, its unique addition was
that economic development requires several coordinated investments in different sectors of the
economy because the marginal product of investments was higher when made simultaneously
(i.e. investments exhibit complementarity).19 Because it was theoretically irrational for
individual agents to privately coordinate investment, countries would become stuck in a
second-best poverty trap. A big push required not just foreign aid to meet the minimum level of
investment, but also some centralised government planning of those investments (see Jomo and
Reinert 2005). That is, there was a problem of where to coordinate and allocate those
investments within the economic system.
The new development economics outlined and sought to remedy many shortcomings of this
capital-centred and planning-centred approach to economic development. Indeed, William
Easterly (2006) referred to the concept of the big push as a “legend”. Focusing solely on
investment and capital accumulation ignores the reality that information is imperfect and
economies are complex. How will investments, including through aid, be coordinated and
allocated to their most efficient use? As such, many criticisms of ‘old development economics’
revolve around the idea that while a minimum quantity of investment may be a necessary
condition for development, it is not a sufficient one:
The allocation of investment, however, unlike the allocation of given stocks of consumer goods
(equilibrium of consumption), or of producer’s goods (equilibrium of production) is necessarily
an imperfect market, i.e. a market on which prices do not signal all the information required for
18 As Chenery (1967, p. 268) notes in the first paragraph: “For most underdeveloped countries, foreign
assistance is already a critical source of development finance and one of the main hopes for accelerated
growth in the future.”
19 Complementary investments are investments which raise any potential profits (or generally, success)
from the use of a new technology (that is, an increase of investment A leads to an increase in the
productivity of investment B). As Murphy et al. (1989, p. 1004) note: “spillovers give rise to the possibility
that coordination of investments across sectors—which the government can promote—is essential for
industrialization”
12
an optimum solution. Additional signalling devices apart from market prices are required.
(Rosenstein-Rodan 1961, p. 2)
Throughout the 1980s there was a resurgence of fields of mainline of economic thought (see
Boettke 2007; 2012) and a range of historical failures of centralised planning, such as the Soviet
Union. Combining these advances with the falling of the neoclassical consensus led to the
realisation that investment and centralised planning wasn’t the standalone key to development
(Coyne and Boettke 2006). It became increasingly clear that the study of economic development
needed to incorporate institutions and entrepreneurship. This mainline understanding of
knowledge coordination and entrepreneurial discovery were the starting point for what has
become known as the ‘new development economics’, which “builds directly on the voluminous
body of research that examines the emergence, operation, and effectiveness of spontaneously
ordered institutional arrangements” (Boettke et al. 2008, p. 333). New development economics
emerged on a different set of analytical principles and intellectual traditions (Boettke et al.
2008; Fine 2006; Rodrik 2008), following advances in entrepreneurial theory (Kirzner 1978,
1982, 1997), new institutional economics (North 1990; Williamson 1975, 1985, 2005), and
Austrian economics (Mises 1949) . In particular, institutional analysis, governance and
knowledge coordination were brought to the foreground of the economics of development and
growth (e.g. Acemoglu and Robinson 2012; Nabli and Nugent 1989). This new understanding of
economic development sat in tension with the old growth economics, returning development
economics back to the mainline of economic thought (Ruttan 1998), which itself has always
been concerned with growth, and thus development. The implication of the new development
economics was that economic development was no longer driven solely by investment,
allocation and central planning, but emphasised how distributed and dispersed contextual
information can be coordinated through institutions and put to use to meet human needs
(Glaeser et al. 2004).
Persistent critiques of the role of government in economic development slowly severed the
connection between central planning and development. Effective state-led investment requires
both an omnipresent state (to overcome the complementarity and allocation of investment
problem) and an omniscient state (to know those sectors or investments which are necessary
for success). Governments are made of individuals, who are neither omnipresent nor
omniscient, and therefore widespread intervention can destabilise existing institutions and
investments. One prominent critic of this centralised approach to development was Peter Bauer
(1976). For Bauer, the central problem with foreign aid was a knowledge problem: how could a
13
planner ever hold the necessary information for aid to be successful and effective? This implies
that development was a discovery problem and the determinants of development had been
“underrated, or even ignored, in most of the development literature … These determinants are
not among the familiar variables of economic analysis; they are not readily quantifiable; and
they cannot easily be manipulated by official policy” (Bauer 1976, p. 80). Bauer’s development
economics analysis incorporates many of the core methodological understandings of mainline
and Austrian economics—of radical uncertainty, knowledge coordination, and heterogeneous
capital combinations—which stem back to Menger (1871) and Böhm-Bawerk (1891), as well as
more recent scholars included Mises (1949) and Hayek (1945). The work of Austrian
economists—particularly relating to the market mechanism and the role of entrepreneurship—
re-introduced the idea of privately ordered spontaneous institutions into the economics of
growth. The entrepreneur became the driving force of the economic system—a premise which
is now widely accepted within the development literature (Kasper and Streit 1998).20
It’s largely through the Austrian conception of development economics where the analogies
with the economic problem of the crypto-economy surface. In Austrian development economics,
development comes from entrepreneurial discovery of the complementarity of various
combinations of heterogeneous capital (Leeson and Boettke 2009; Manish and Powell 2015).
Particularly because blockchain technology is extremely fast moving (Atzori 2015)
entrepreneurial discovery of the institutions of the crypto-economy occur under fundamental
and radical uncertainty (Lachmann 1976; Shackle 1992). Blockchain entrepreneurs require
information about future changes in the state of the world, business models, financing, timing,
and consumer demand, competitors, failed ventures, and so on. The development of the
blockchain crypto-economy, like all entrepreneurship, is a knowledge coordination problem,
and, as we will see below, is analogous to the economic problem facing territorial developing
economies as examined in the new development economics literature.
The notion that a new industry, and the entrepreneurs within it, face a different set of
challenges than a completely formed industry is not a novel concept (Aldrich and Fiol 1994).
Blockchain proto-entrepreneurs, in the earliest stages of the new industry, can be seen to be
navigating “an institutional vacuum of indifferent munificence” (Aldrich and Fiol 1994, p. 645).
However, on deeper inspection, and in the context of the findings in the previous section of the
20This is in contrast to the earlier old development economics, where Leff (1979, p. 47) explains how
“since approximately the 1970’s, the topic of entrepreneurship has virtually disappeared, suggesting that
in some sense the problem has been ‘solved’.”
14
entrepreneurial challenge of crypto-secession, there are multiple economic problems facing the
blockchain entrepreneur. Indeed, in the same way that entrepreneurship manifests itself in
many ways in the formal economy—from starting a new corner store, developing a new smart
phone application, or arbitraging foreign exchange markets (Boettke and Coyne 2009; Parker
2005)—blockchain entrepreneurship manifests itself in many different ways (Arthur 2009;
Ziman 2003). On one hand, when blockchain entrepreneurs integrate they must look to the
institutions of the formal economy for information over price points, products, opportunities,
complementary investments, and so on, which, when arranged in the right order, will define
market opportunities for blockchain integration. On the other hand, when blockchain
entrepreneurs secede to the crypto-economy, they face a different higher-order entrepreneurial
challenge.
It is from this perspective of crypto-secession that we can see the connection with
development economics—as blockchain entrepreneurs seek to discover, create and test novel
institutional structures and mechanisms that act as the core ordering principle of governance in
this new frontier society. As we saw above, crypto-secession requires the discovery of self-
contained and self-executing mechanisms of blockchain governance that are not embedded in
the existing institutional environment. Crypto-entrepreneurs lack precedent over the
institutional structure in which they operate and are seeking to change. As such, the main
proposition here is that the entrepreneurial process of crypto-secession is best viewed not just
through the lens of a new industry, but rather from the perspective as a developing the
protective-tier of a new economy.
15
Crypto-entrepreneurs must develop a ‘protective-tier’ of institutional solutions that
outcompete existing state-based institutions. Indeed, the development of the crypto-economy is
perhaps the most explicit form of protect-tier entrepreneurship yet, or at least amenable to
analysis, given that there are no existing protective institutions, and that those institutions must
be publicly secure and verifiable, as well as trusted. As the cases of crypto-secession in Section 2
revealed, crypto-secession requires the discovery of institutions necessary to enforce exchanges
of information on distributed and secure public ledgers. For the crypto-economy, the protection
of property rights (and the values of that property) must first be determined through
entrepreneurial application and discovery of codes. This economic problem faces higher
structural uncertainty than integration because crypto-entrepreneurs must discover an entirely
new set of institutions which is detached from the formal economy. This aligns with
Williamson’s hierarchy of institutions and entrepreneurship, as outlined in Bylund and
McCaffrey (2017). At deeper levels of institutional entrepreneurship—of shaping public affairs
and institutions—entrepreneurs face a higher level of entrepreneurial strucutral uncertainty.
Indeed, to crypto-secede and develop the crypto-economy requires its own knowledge
structures, enforcement, and incentive mechanisms built in. The institutional environment
cannot be taken as given, it must be created.
To develop the crypto-economy, entrepreneurs not only have to discover the enforcement
mechanisms of each blockchain application, but also the most basic institutional structures that
connect those applications together. In this way crypto-secession requires the discovery of
blockchain complementarities. Blockchains exhibit complementarity both with existing
technologies (e.g. the internet of things) and institutions (e.g. firms and government), but also
with other heterogeneous blockchains within the crypto-economy. Capital goods are
heterogeneous and exhibit complementarities in the sense that they satisfy different plans for
human actors. They also have “multiple specificity” in the sense that capital can be put to use in
different plans (Lachmann 1956).21 The range of blockchains within the crypto-economy
similarly exhibit heterogeneity and multiple specificity. Blockchain technology, as demonstrated
in the previous section, can be applied to multiple problems, and they can also be combined and
used in multiple plans. The entrepreneurial development task, then, is to ask how these bits of
capital will be structured to form the crypto-economy. This is an entrepreneurial problem
requiring discovery of how each potential application for blockchain (for instance, utilising
21 As Lachmann (1956, p. 114) outlines, multiple specificity implies that “their mode of use changes as
circumstances change.”
16
bitcoin) will fulfil a need, yet also discover how the other blockchains within the crypto-
economy will interact with the new institution. Blockchains also exhibit complementarity with
other blockchains within the crypto-economy because the technology multiplier applies on
inter-blockchains interactions (an investment in one application of blockchain will alter the
return of a different blockchain). Multiple decentralised processes of blockchains in the crypto-
economy can interact, which lowers the cost of additional blockchain applications (i.e. a
multiplier effect).
The process of discovering the structure of the protective-tier technologies of the blockchain
crypto-economy, however, requires non-price coordination of distributed Hayekian information
about potential blockchain applications—it is a proto-entrepreneurial economic problem (Allen
and Potts 2016). In some ways this is similar to the entrepreneurial problem of developing a
territorial nation state, as has been the focus in the new development economics literature.
There are, however, two critical differences between the economic development of a territorial
22 The Pangea acts as a “decentralised P2P client, with encrypted communication, ID and reputation
system, dispute resolution and a DApp Library with an API, so people can create and sell their own Do-it-
Yourself Governance Apps and DApps” (BitNation 2016).
23 This development is informed by “substantial insights on what components of government are
17
economy and the economic development of the non-territorial crypto-economy. First, the
crypto-economy has few existing institutional systems. While development economics tends to
recognise that the existing indigenous institutions matter—including for instance skills, culture
and conventions—this is unique for the blockchain ecosystem because there are no clear
existing institutions.24 Indeed, crypto-secession could be understood as a private effort to
‘shock’ and overcome the path dependence of existing sovereign institutions (Boettke et al.
2008).
Second, there is no central planning authority to guide the discovery of institutions. While,
as discussed above, the economics of development shifted from a focus on capital and
investment towards institutions and change, the question of precisely how those institutions
change given issues such as stickiness and path dependence remains unanswered. Recent
efforts include the use of private cities (Rajagopalan and Tabarrok 2014) and charter cities
(Fuller and Romer 2012), both of which are attempts to push significant shifts in institutional
mechanisms through developing special economic zones. However, such territorial special
economic zones require state-based political change. Crypto-secession, on the other hand,
requires no sovereign permission to change institutions—it is a privately driven
entrepreneurial process—but can still be viewed through the same lens of changing existing
institutions. The entrepreneurial process of discovering the institutions of the crypto-economy,
however, does not occur within an institutional vacuum. Blockchain entrepreneurship, like all
early-stage proto-entrepreneurship, requires non-price coordination of distributed information
about market opportunities. Indeed:
When William Easterly (2006) criticised the old development economics paradigm he shifted
attention away from “planners” towards “searchers” in directing this development process.
Searchers are entrepreneurs and are necessary because of the inherent epistemological
challenges in economic development. The blockchain crypto-economy does not have a central
planner—it is entirely governed by the consensus of the nodes maintaining the system through
various blockchain protocols. Although attempts have been made to create quasi-state bodies,
24 See Coyne and Boettke (2006) for a discussion of the importance of indigenous institutions.
18
such as the Bitcoin Foundation, to coordinate some aspects and facilitate debates the crypto-
economy itself has no sovereign. This is despite the fact regular debates within the blockchain
and bitcoin community concern the most effective mechanisms to maintain the robustness and
efficiency of the crypto-economy (van Wildum 2016).
Through the findings of this paper, the collaborative nature of the blockchain ecosystem can
be viewed as a robust system of private institutional controls in order to develop the crypto-
economy. In this way there are in fact two levels of protective-tier technologies within the
development of the crypto-economy. The lower level of the protective-tier is the collectively
developed rules within innovation commons where blockchain entrepreneurs govern non-price
information necessary to apply blockchain technology. This level of protective-tier technologies
include the reputation mechanisms, signalling and nested hierarchies of rules that constitute
Bitcoin Embassies, hack-a-thons, online forums and mailing lists (Allen 2017). Each of these
involve protective-tier entrepreneurship in the sense that proto-entrepreneurs must overcome
19
the hazards of coordinating non-price information of which the state the comparatively
ineffective at protecting. The higher level of protective-tier technologies are the technologies
that were the main body of this paper, which enable individuals exchanging within the crypto-
economy to enforce and coordinate their economic activities outside of territorial nation
states—that is, entrepreneurial discovery to secede.
My analysis began outlining the entrepreneurial choice to either integrate blockchains into
institutions of the territorial state, or to undertake a process of political exit and crypto-
secession to the crypto-economy. Through several case studies of crypto-secession we saw that
blockchain entrepreneurs are currently developing the decentralised institutional mechanisms
necessary to define value systems and enforce trade outside of the scope of formal state-based
institutions. In this way, the economics of the entrepreneurial problem of crypto-secession to
the crypto-economy is analogous to the insights of ‘new development economics’, and the
Austrian approach of focusing on entrepreneurial discovery of complementary combinations of
heterogeneous capital.
There were two main findings from theoretically connecting new development economics
and the entrepreneurial problem of the crypto-economy. The first was that the economic
process of crypto-secession is analogous to an economic development problem of ‘protective-tier’
entrepreneurship (Leeson and Boettke 2009), which requires discovering the institutional
mechanisms of the crypto-economy through entrepreneurial coordination of dispersed non-
price information. Crypto-entrepreneurs cannot take the institutional environment as given,
they must create it. The second was that, given there is no over-arching sovereign state to
coordinate and direct investment within a decentralised crypto-economy, the process of
economic development of the crypto-economy must be privately governed by entrepreneurs
(‘searchers’) rather than by governments (‘planners’). The implication of these findings is to
20
provide a further explanation for the diversity of blockchain innovation commons as
mechanisms of private entrepreneurial development of the crypto-economy through non-price
coordination.
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