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Blockchain-Based Land Registers: A Law-and-Economics Perspective

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Disruptive Technology, Legal Innovation, and the Future of Real Estate

Abstract

Both land registration and blockchains pursue the production of immutable information. Land registration is hence among the most often suggested use cases of the blockchain technology. However, only a very small number of successful large-scale applications exist in the wild. This chapter aims at explaining why this number is so low despite blockchain’s prima facie suitability for land registration. After laying technical and legal foundations, we argue that trading shares of real estate investment funds on a blockchain has little to do with land registration. This allows us to concentrate on the benefits that the blockchain technology may provide for land registration in a proper sense. We show that “anchoring” land registers in public blockchains by regularly writing hash values of their content in one or several of those blockchains can overcome lack of trust in the immutability of digitized land registers without affecting the latter’s rules and organization. In contrast, implementing the entire land registration system on a blockchain and change rules and governance accordingly may result in high efficiency and effectiveness. This may be a big leap forward for many jurisdictions. In jurisdictions with already well-functioning land registration systems, the gain from a transition to the blockchain technology tends to be small for both deeds recordation and title registration systems, in fact often too small to justify the costs of transition. The major reason is that many inevitable links between real-estate reality to its blockchain representation require human decisions to balance the diverging interests of affected parties.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    In some jurisdictions Bitcoins as virtual commodities cannot be owned as property nor can they be object of any other legal right.

  2. 2.

    With five competing blockchains, the smallest one would use less than 20% of the computing power. Redirecting computing power from other blockchains would make a 51-percent attack relatively easy.

  3. 3.

    Outside the area of land registration, proof of authority underlies several major blockchain projects, such as the academic blockchain-based repository “bloxberg” or facebook’s “libra” currency.

  4. 4.

    The same is true for tokens that are assigned to a blockchain address for which the owner lost his private key. To keep these tokens and the assets the ownership of which they represent tradable, the land registration authority must be able to transfer them to an address that the legal owner controls.

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Acknowledgements

Thanks for helpful comments go to the participants of the Conference on Disruptive Technology, Legal Innovation and the Future of Real Estate at IDC Herzliya and of the Law and Economics Research Seminars at the Universities of Kassel and of Vienna. All remaining errors are mine, of course. This work received support by a generous grant of Metamorphoses GmbH, Baunatal.

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Correspondence to Georg von Wangenheim .

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von Wangenheim, G. (2020). Blockchain-Based Land Registers: A Law-and-Economics Perspective. In: Lehavi, A., Levine-Schnur, R. (eds) Disruptive Technology, Legal Innovation, and the Future of Real Estate. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-52387-9_6

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