Risks and Transaction Costs of Distributed-Ledger Fintech: Boundary Effects and Consequences
Kim Kaivanto, Daniel Prince

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the unique risks and transaction costs associated with distributed-ledger fintech models, emphasizing code, moral hazard, and unintended consequences of replicating traditional contracts in low-cost environments.
Contribution
It identifies and delineates specific risks and transaction costs inherent in distributed-ledger and smart-contract fintech models, which are often overlooked during early testing phases.
Findings
Code risk and moral-hazard risk are significant in fintech models.
Replicating traditional contracts in fintech can lead to unintended consequences.
Risks become more apparent during wider economic deployment.
Abstract
Fintech business models based on distributed ledgers -- and their smart-contract variants in particular -- offer the prospect of democratizing access to faster, anywhere-accessible, lower cost, reliable-and-secure high-quality financial services. In addition to holding great, economically transformative promise, these business models pose new, little-studied risks and transaction costs. However, these risks and transaction costs are not evident during the demonstration and testing phases of development, when adopters and users are drawn from the community of developers themselves, as well as from among non-programmer fintech evangelists. Hence, when the new risks and transaction costs become manifest -- as the fintech business models are rolled out across the wider economy -- the consequences may also appear to be new and surprising. The present study represents an effort to get ahead…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFinTech, Crowdfunding, Digital Finance · Consumer Market Behavior and Pricing · Gambling Behavior and Treatments
