{"id":130935,"date":"2023-01-19T03:36:54","date_gmt":"2023-01-19T03:36:54","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/?p=130935"},"modified":"2023-01-19T03:36:54","modified_gmt":"2023-01-19T03:36:54","slug":"the-number-of-dao-members-increased-130x-in-2021-to-1-6-million-report","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/markets\/the-number-of-dao-members-increased-130x-in-2021-to-1-6-million-report\/","title":{"rendered":"The Number of DAO Members Increased 130x in 2021 to 1.6 Million: Report"},"content":{"rendered":"

The World Economic Forum (WEF) delivered its latest January report on the decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) landscape in the last couple of years. In 2021, DAO participants increased by a factor of 130x. However, with DAO maturity come legal challenges.<\/p>\n

The Decentralized Autonomous Organization Toolkit<\/h3>\n

The World Economic Forum\u2019s latest January 2023 insight is titled \u201cDecentralized Autonomous Organization Toolkit.\u201d<\/p>\n

The progress in the DAO arena is especially of interest because these smart-contract platforms have the potential to revolutionize governance through open-source automation. Under the WEF umbrella, the 38-page DAO report was crafted by WEF\u2019s Crypto Impact and Sustainability Accelerator (CISA) in collaboration with the Wharton Blockchain and Digital Asset Project (BDAP).<\/p>\n

Aiden Slavin contributed as WEF\u2019s CISA project lead based in the US. From the side of the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Bianca Kremer and Kevin Werbach added their legal perspective on DAOs.<\/p>\n

By relying on the underlying smart contracts, which are hosted on a public blockchain, all DAO activity is inherently transparent. Likewise, there are no operating costs involved as there is no need for third-party services to serve as expensive watchdogs and facilitators.<\/p>\n

As such, DAOs can alleviate massive organizational and financial burdens for any type of activity that relies on coordination with other people. In short, DAOs push the envelope on the most cost-effective allocation of capital simultaneously as they alleviate counterparty risk (malicious behavior).<\/p>\n

In practice, however, WEF researchers identified some major issues that need consideration in creating DAOs.<\/p>\n

Highlights of the WEF\u2019s Report on DAOs<\/h3>\n

Tracking the progress of blockchain adoption since 2020, the WEF notes an 18x increase in smart-contracts\u2019 total value locked (TVL), going from $670 million to $13 billion. The following year, in 2021, DAO TVL alone increased by 40x, from $380 million to $16 billion.<\/p>\n

During that bull run year, DAO participants increased by 130x, from 13,000 to 1.6 million. Predictably, after the Federal Reserve\u2019s liquidity reversal with interest rate hikes in 2022, DAOs total treasury decreased to $11.5 billion.<\/p>\n

The WEF report isn\u2019t concerned with DAO growth as it is with operational, technical, governance, and legal challenges facing DAO deployment. Hence, this is why the report has \u201ctoolkit\u201d in the title. As the first point, WEF researchers established criteria by which organizations could be classified as DAOs:<\/p>\n