German Blockchain Strategy Should Include Framework for Crypto Trading, Say Politicians

Published at: March 11, 2019

Disclaimer: This article previously reported that the politicians’ statements were made during the public hearing at the Bundestag’s Finance Committee, rather than ahead of it. It has been redacted to reflect accurate timing.

German parliamentary representatives have argued that the country’s blockchain strategy should include an appropriate legal framework for cryptocurrency trading and token issuance that would encourage the sector’s domestic development.

The suggestion was put forward by the Union parties’ finance spokesperson Antje Tillmann and her colleague Matthias Hauer in a statement put forth ahead of a public hearing at the Bundestag’s Finance Committee on March 11.

The scheduled hearing was initiated to debate the opportunities that blockchain technology can offer to Germany as a financial and business hub. In their statement ahead of the hearing, Tillman and Hauer tackled both the current and desired state of blockchain development in the country and reviewed the federal government’s initiatives in the sector to date.

The joint statement emphasized that while still in its early stages, blockchain is poised to make a significant and constructive impact as a base technology for national digitization strategies across multiple fields, and that the foundations for its future implementation should therefore be laid today.

While commending the German federal government’s promotion of blockchain pilot projects across applications such as electromobility, electricity trading and at the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees, Tillman and Hauer stated that efforts to ensure that Germany can compete globally should be stepped up:

“...there has been an increasing outflow of promising [blockchain] startups to European and non-European countries for some time now. Financing rounds based on blockchain technology (so-called initial coin offerings [ICOs]) are meanwhile taking place almost exclusively abroad.”

The lawmakers proposed that, in order to remain at the forefront of innovation and prevent a further brain drain of blockchain talent, the German government’s blockchain strategy should encompass an appropriate legal framework that would set clear terms for cryptocurrency and token trading:

“The potential of blockchain technology can only be fully realized if there is legal certainty and potential risks are mitigated. The goal must be to retain the entire added value of this promising technology in Germany and to develop our country into a pioneer of the blockchain economy. "

As Cointelegraph reported earlier this month, Germany’s finance ministry has just published a paper on the treatment and regulation of blockchain-based securities, which exempted most token issuance from federal security laws but nonetheless highlighted the risks that ICOs may pose for investors.

Also this month, Germany’s justice and finance ministries proposed to launch a state-run register to regulate the blockchain sector and protect investors from possible abuses.

A nationwide blockchain strategy from the German government is expected to be introduced by mid-2019.

Tags
Law
Related Posts
French official wants to change how Europe regulates crypto and blockchain
France’s top financial regulator has proposed to change the way the cryptocurrency industry is supervised in Europe. Robert Ophèle, chairman of Autorité des Marchés Financiers, addressed crypto-realted regulatory issues at the 5th Annual Conference on FinTech and Regulation. The official argued that financial supervisors must take a new approach in regulating blockchain-based financial instruments due to massive growth in the market. Ophèle proposed that the European Securities and Markets Authority, or ESMA, should be the responsible authority for this new area of regulation and supervision. Ophèle emphasized that the current stage of regulation in the European Union would make it …
Blockchain / Feb. 9, 2021
US State of Colorado Passes Crypto Exemptions Bill Into Law
The governor of the State of Colorado, Jared S. Polis has signed the “Colorado Digital Token Act” into law, according to a document published on March 6. The act — which was initially proposed in January and sponsored at the state Senate level by Republican Jack Tate and Democrat Steve Fenberg — provides limited exemptions for securities registration and traders, as well as salesperson licensing requirements for persons dealing in digital tokens. The bill identifies a "digital token" as “a digital unit with specified characteristics, secured through a decentralized ledger or database, exchangeable for goods or services, and capable of …
Blockchain / March 11, 2019
German Financial Regulator Issues Paper on Blockchain Securities Regulation
The German Federal Ministry of Finance has published a key issues paper on the treatment and regulation of blockchain-based securities, according to a ministry announcement on March 8. In the paper initially released on March 7, the regulator discusses the introduction of regulations for electronic securities and the issuance of crypto tokens. The document stipulates that the regulation of electronic securities should be technology-neutral, which means that they could be based on blockchain, or distributed ledger technology (DLT). The issuance of crypto tokens purportedly will not be subject to existing market regulations since crypto tokens do not represent securities, investment …
Blockchain / March 9, 2019
Ideas vs. practice: How are regulators working together on crypto?
The regulation of cryptocurrencies across the world is a constant battle for investors in a rapidly expanding and constantly changing ecosystem. Various regulatory agencies around the world view digital assets in a different light that vary significantly from one another. Recently, executive board member of the European Central Bank (ECB) Fabio Panetta mentioned in a written statement for a speech to Columbia University that regulators should follow a globally coordinated approach while regulating digital assets. He said that the world should have digital assets regulated by the Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Countering the Financing of Terrorism (CFT) rules of the …
Decentralization / May 25, 2022
CBDC activity heats up, but few projects move beyond pilot stage
Government-issued electronic currency seems to be an idea whose time has come. “More than half of the world’s central banks are now developing digital currencies or running concrete experiments on them,” reported the Bank for International Settlements, or BIS, in early May — something that would have been unthinkable only a few years ago. The BIS also found that nine out of ten central banks were exploring central bank digital currencies, or CBDCs, in some form or other, according to its survey of 81 central banks conducted last autumn but just published. Many were taken aback by the progress. “It …
Adoption / May 16, 2022