Authors: A.Yu. Malkin, D.Yu. Boboshko
Title of the article: Cryptocurrencies in the view of economics research schools
Year: 2026, Issue: 1, Pages: 90-97
Branch of knowledge: 5.2.3 Regional and sectoral economics
Index UDK: 336.74
DOI: 10.26730/2587-5574-2026-1-90-97
Abstract: This study presents a comprehensive analysis of the cryptocurrency market through the lens of classical and modern economic schools, focusing on key regulatory mechanisms: staking, halving, token burning, and asset locking. The relevance of the research stems from the need to develop a theoretical framework for managing the stability and liquidity of decentralized financial systems amid high volatility and technological transformation. The hypothesis posits that integrating principles from economic schools (classical, Keynesian, monetarist, Austrian, institutional) with algorithmic cryptocurrency mechanisms can create a hybrid model of market resilience. Using an interdisciplinary approach, including mathematical modeling, regression, and correlation analysis of data on Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP, and BNB, the study confirmed Bitcoin’s dominant role as a systemic asset through token burning and vesting. The practical implications include recommendations for optimizing regulatory mechanisms, diversifying investment portfolios, and designing stress tests to mitigate systemic risks.
Key words: Cryptocurrency market Economic schools Staking Halving Algorithmic regulation Bitcoin
Receiving date: 12.01.2026
Approval date: 04.02.2026
Publication date: 12.03.2026
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.