Ether supply reduced by 100,000 coins since The Merge
Since The Merge moved Ethereum away from an energy-intensive proof-of-work consensus mechanism to a more environmentally friendly proof-of-stake method, the supply of ether has declined by more than 100,000 coins.
Over the last 217 days, the total supply of ether has declined by 103,092 coins — worth more than $200 million at current prices — according to Ethereum tracking website ultrasound.money.
Were The Merge never to have happened and Ethereum remained secured by miners, as opposed to stakers, the ether supply would have increased by more than 2.52 million coins — or $4.9 billion. The supply of Ethereum’s native coins would also have increased yearly by 3.53%.
Instead, post-Merge Ethereum’s coin supply is down by 0.144% per year. Furthermore, ultrasound.money claims $1.2 billion is being removed from the ether supply over the same time frame.
The supply of ether has declined by 0.144% yearly since The Merge. Source: ultrasound.money
The current supply of ether is roughly 120,418,032 million coins.
Ethereum Improvement Proposal 1559 started the fire
Though The Merge has undoubtedly catalyzed Ethereum’s reduction in native-coin supply, it did not itself implement the burning of ether. Instead, that tokenomic aspect was triggered by Ethereum Improvement Proposal 1559 — or EIP-1559, for short — which was pushed via the London upgrade.
Last August — or 623 days ago, to be precise — Ethereum’s London upgrade effectively split transaction fees into a base cost and a priority fee. The former is burned, while the latter served as a form of payment to miners — which no longer exist for the protocol.
EIP-1559 was also designed to exert deflationary pressure on the ether supply since the base fee gets burned and can no longer be used on the network — reducing the amount of inflation on the Ethereum network. But it, itself, hasn’t decreased the blockchain’s total supply. Since London went live, the total supply of ether has increased by 3.21 million coins.
On the subject of burning ether, that activity has increased since Ethereum’s Shapella upgrade opened up staked ether withdrawals just over one week ago.