This revised version still has a lot of issues: centralized allocation authority remains, emissions are unconditional regardless of real demand, burn mechanisms are delayed and discretionary, there’s no built-in path for unused capital, and transparency depends on off-chain reporting. It also retains regulatory risk due to committee-based fund control and lacks any structural mechanism to align emissions with actual community participation or market discipline. These core flaws leave it vulnerable to inefficiency, capture, and legal scrutiny.
Quote:
“The Treasury Committee will also hold the keys to the Endowment’s mint address and will make regular, approved transfers of tokens to the Endowment’s operational wallets.”
This centralizes monetary power in the hands of a few appointed members. Even if they’re community-nominated, authority over minting and disbursing funds is retained by a fixed body, violating any meaningful principle of decentralized capital allocation. It is top-down monetary management with a democratic façade.
Quote:
“The rest of the Endowment will be created via new emissions over a 60 month period… These new tokens will be minted and deposited directly to the Treasury address.”
Token emissions are predetermined and unconditional. There is no mechanism for opt-in participation. No matter how engaged or disengaged an STX holder is, they are subjected to dilution. This model enforces inflation passively and does not allow for economic signaling through individual action.
Quote:
“If the size of the Endowment’s total liquid assets grows to exceed $1b USD, it will devise a burn program and present that program to the community for a vote.”
This burn plan is contingent on speculative valuations and committee discretion. Instead of building burns directly into the system as a voluntary check against excess, this approach institutionalizes it as a reactive, bureaucratic process. It incentivizes hoarding until arbitrary thresholds are met, rather than discipline through design.
Quote:
“Community Grants… will be administered by the operational entity… with final allocations made by direct vote of the Treasury Committee.”
This undermines the notion of “community” participation. Input may be visible, but power remains concentrated. Voting is symbolic, not decisive. The committee retains full discretion and can override majority (or minority or individual) preferences without consequences.
Quote:
“A key element of the mandate for the Endowment… is to clearly communicate… the activities being undertaken… The Endowment staff will be mandated to produce and publish a detailed annual report.”
Transparency is not a substitute for consent. Annual reports are retroactive, not proactive. Publishing actions after the fact does not empower individuals to determine those actions in advance. It is the illusion of accountability without structural restraint.
Quote:
“All STX for the Endowment will initially flow through publicly published addresses on chain so that the Endowment’s STX are traceable…”
On-chain traceability is meaningless when participants cannot influence the flow. Surveillance without sovereignty does not equal decentralization, it only broadcasts the movements of a bureaucracy to its subjects.