Markets will decide on regulations, not the government: Currency Comptroller

Published at: Oct. 7, 2020

Brian Brooks, Acting Comptroller of the Currency said the future of cryptocurrency regulations is in the hands of the people, and not the government.

He told Cointelegraph's Alex Cohen at the LA Blockchain Summit that he believes that change tends to happen slowly. While the Internet 1.0 didn’t seem revolutionary, look where we’re at now.

“In the end, it’s the market and consumers that will decide the fate of crypto regulation, not the government,” said Brooks, formerly the Chief Legal Officer at Coinbase. 

He explained that the role of the government is to set up a regulatory framework to prevent money laundering, fraud, and other criminal activities — not to build tech or issue a token.

“The government has no history to build products that innovate and offer people good choices. They don’t issue travelers checks, American Express does. They don’t issue prepaid cards, Citibank does. So why do we think it’d be different in constructing a payments instrument?”

Instead, the government needs to focus on what it does best: establishing rules and conducting supervision. “We’re trying to build the framework, we’re excited that there are tech companies coming out with tokens. Let’s marry those two things up,” he said.

Brooks believes that decentralization is inevitable and uses the analogy of how post offices were the central authority for communication at one point in time, but internet P2P communications have made them almost obsolete. He imagines the same scenario will play out for the crypto industry. “One day finance may look a lot like communication today," he said. "The central authorities may not play as big of a role as they perform today."

“I don’t advocate for that, but I also don’t resist it — the point is that the trendlines are probably unstoppable at some level and we just need to put a framework around that so that people don’t get scammed in the future any more than they get scammed today.”

Brooks seems less concerned with the problem of money laundering in crypto than some officials, and he pointed out that much money laundering happens in the current banking system.

“If there are bad actors in crypto, we need to do what we can to stop those activities just like how we do with the banks. Believing that there’s a future state where we can eliminate criminal activity or risk completely, is foolhardy.”
Tags
Related Posts
Ukraine joins the comity of crypto-friendly nations with new regulation
The legal status of cryptocurrencies remains a mixed bag of regulatory positions, depending on the jurisdiction being considered. While some countries move toward blanket prohibitions or stringent regulations, others elect to go with a more open approach to crypto. For Ukraine, the latter path appears to be the case, with the government encouraging legalized crypto operations within the country. Ukraine’s seemingly positive stance on cryptocurrencies also stands in stark contrast with neighboring Russia where officials are enacting regulatory roadblocks against the ownership and use of digital currencies. While Ukraine enacts laws to recognize and regulate crypto, the country’s central bank …
Adoption / Sept. 24, 2021
Digital currency may be an answer to help the unbanked, Sen. Warren says
Senator and former United States presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren believes that the digital asset industry may be a tool to tackle some challenges in the traditional financial system. A known skeptic of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin (BTC), Warren appeared to have softened her stance on the crypto industry in a CNBC Squawk Box interview on Wednesday, stating that digital currencies could be an instrument to bank the unbanked: “There has been an enormous failure by the big banks to reach consumers all across the country. Digital currency and central bank digital currency may be an answer there.” The senator emphasized that …
Adoption / July 28, 2021
Presenting Crypto Finance Conference in St. Moritz
The annual Crypto Finance Conference (CfC), an international conference on digital asset and blockchain conceived for sophisticated investors and decision makers, will be held on Jan. 20–22, 2021. Among featured speakers there will be representatives of Winklevoss Capital, Swiss National Bank, the European Parliament, Ledger and others. Cointelegraph serves as the main media partner for the CfC St. Moritz 2021 and prepared a special page dedicated to the event. The program of the three-day event will include discussions on the macro-perspective and micro-perspective on the industry – on Jan. 20 and 21, and focus events about social impact and decentralization …
Adoption / Nov. 11, 2020
A Bitcoiner Is Behind the Recent Banking Crypto Clarity
Recent regulatory approval for banking crypto custody comes after a Coinbase alum took a prominent seat as the Acting Comptroller of the Currency for the the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, or OCC — a U.S. banking regulator. “There’s one major change that occured over the last 60 days,” Morgan Creek Digital co-founder Anthony Pompliano said in a July 23 episode of his YouTube show, Lunch Money. Pomp added: “Brian Brooks, who used to be the chief legal officer of Coinbase, is now the Acting Comptroller of the Currency. He’s in charge, so there’s a Bitcoiner in the …
Regulation / July 23, 2020
Deutsche Bank Research: Crypto to Replace Fiat Currencies by 2030
By 2030, the demand for alternative currencies will rise, with digital currencies eventually replacing cash, according to recent research from Deutsche Bank. In the “Imagine 2030” report, Deutsche Bank strategist Jim Reid raised awareness of the challenges the existing fiat system has encountered in recent years, specifically with the emergence of cryptocurrencies. Reid stipulated that people’s heightened demand for dematerialized means of payment and anonymity could drive more individuals to digital currencies. Mainstream adoption and co-occurring challenges In order to gain wider acceptance, digital assets need to overcome three major hurdles. These include perceived legitimacy in the eyes of governments …
Adoption / Dec. 6, 2019