English

Centralization in Block Building and Proposer-Builder Separation

Computer Science and Game Theory 2024-01-23 v1 Cryptography and Security Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing Theoretical Economics

Abstract

The goal of this paper is to rigorously interrogate conventional wisdom about centralization in block-building (due to, e.g., MEV and private order flow) and the outsourcing of block-building by validators to specialists (i.e., proposer-builder separation): 1. Does heterogeneity in skills and knowledge across block producers inevitably lead to centralization? 2. Does proposer-builder separation eliminate heterogeneity and preserve decentralization among proposers? This paper develops mathematical models and results that offer answers to these questions: 1. In a game-theoretic model with endogenous staking, heterogeneous block producer rewards, and staking costs, we quantify the extent to which heterogeneous rewards lead to concentration in the equilibrium staking distribution. 2. In a stochastic model in which heterogeneous block producers repeatedly reinvest rewards into staking, we quantify, as a function of the block producer heterogeneity, the rate at which stake concentrates on the most sophisticated block producers. 3. In a model with heterogeneous proposers and specialized builders, we quantify, as a function of the competitiveness of the builder ecosystem, the extent to which proposer-builder separation reduces the heterogeneity in rewards across different proposers. Our models and results take advantage of connections to contest design, P\'olya urn processes, and auction theory.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2401.12120,
  title  = {Centralization in Block Building and Proposer-Builder Separation},
  author = {Maryam Bahrani and Pranav Garimidi and Tim Roughgarden},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2401.12120},
  year   = {2024}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T14:23:46.431Z