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Tokenomics is often focused on the obvious aspects—dividend payouts and burn mechanisms. But in complex ecosystems like Falcon Finance, what’s truly easy to overlook is the governance power held by the holders. The pricing mechanism of this power is somewhat mysterious, but its actual weight may far exceed expectations.
Today, let’s not dwell on price fluctuations. Instead, look at it from a different angle—how are the costs and benefits of governance itself calculated?
**The True Cost Behind Governance Rights**
Making a reliable governance decision in a DAO is actually quite challenging. You need to thoroughly understand technical proposals, assess various risks, and predict how the market will react. For retail investors, this time investment is invisible and intangible; for large holders, it’s directly real money poured into research teams.
FF’s design is somewhat clever—it ties governance participation to individual rewards. Want a higher sUSDf yield multiplier? Then you need to stake FF. Staking FF automatically grants you the right to participate in governance voting.
This mechanism naturally creates a filtering effect: those truly willing to delve into governance are often those whose funds are already in the protocol, with deeply aligned interests, and motivation to study proposal details. The benefit of this approach is clear—it reduces the noise from casual “vote with a click” participation, thereby improving overall decision quality. The “decision-making costs” paid by deeply involved users are actually safeguarding the protocol’s long-term stability, which is a rarely mentioned pillar supporting FF’s value.
**Where Do the Benefits Come From**
When governance decisions start to genuinely influence capital flows, it’s no longer just about voting rights—participation itself carries a premium. This reflects the ecosystem’s maturity and is also the basis for the deeper pricing of the token.