Credit Limits beyond Full Collateralization in Decentralized Micropayments: Incentive Conditions
Chien-Chih Chen, Wojciech Golab
TLDR
This paper identifies incentive conditions for decentralized micropayments to offer under-collateralized credit limits, improving capital efficiency.
Key contributions
- Characterizes incentive conditions for under-collateralized credit in non-custodial micropayments.
- Models buyer-merchant interactions, identifying bounded exposure and verifiable settlement for deterrence.
- Clarifies the trade-off between capital efficiency and enforcement conditions for credit expansion.
- Provides an Arbitrum Nitro prototype demonstrating low on-chain overhead for the design.
Why it matters
This research addresses a critical limitation in decentralized finance by enabling credit limits without full collateral, significantly boosting capital efficiency. It provides a framework for secure, under-collateralized micropayments, expanding their practical applicability and reducing liquidity demands.
Original Abstract
In decentralized non-custodial micropayments, the central challenge is not whether payments can be executed directly, but under what conditions such systems can offer credit limits without requiring full collateral backing. Existing approaches typically tie available credit to posted collateral, causing liquidity requirements to scale with transaction volume and settlement exposure and limiting the practical usefulness of credit-based micropayments. This paper characterizes the incentive conditions under which credit-based non-custodial micropayments can operate beyond full collateralization while remaining incentive compatible. We model repeated buyer--merchant interactions under public monitoring and identify the roles of bounded exposure, verifiable settlement outcomes, and continuation value in deterring strategic default under non-custodial execution. The resulting characterization clarifies the trade-off between capital efficiency and the enforcement conditions required to sustain under-collateralized credit expansion without custodial trust. As an illustrative application-layer instantiation, an Arbitrum Nitro prototype provides execution-level evidence that the settlement, commitment, and incentive-enforcement paths of a credit-limit-based design can be realized with low on-chain overhead.
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