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Biden administration to regulate cryptocurrencies

written by Bella Palmer
cryptocurrencies

The White House wants to set out a set of policies to regulate cryptocurrencies as currently legislation and its enforcement are scattered across sectors and agencies

The White House wants to bring order to the ‘haphazard approach’ that is currently being employed by regulators to Bitcoin and cryptocurrency.

The White House wants to set out a cohesive set of policies to regulate Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies as currently legislation and its enforcement are scattered across sectors and agencies, according to multiple reports.

The Biden administration will release an executive order in the coming weeks to task federal agencies with assessing the risks and opportunities that Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies pose, Bloomberg first reported.

The order is set to come under the umbrella of national security efforts as the administration seeks to analyze cryptocurrencies and employ a cohesive regulatory framework that would cover Bitcoin, cryptocurrencies, stablecoins, and NFTs, Barron’s reported Thursday.

This is designed to look holistically at digital assets and develop a set of policies that give coherency to what the government is trying to do in this space, a person familiar with the White House’s plan told Barron’s. Because digital assets don’t stay in one country, it’s necessary to work with other countries on synchronization.

The regulatory efforts would reportedly involve the State Department, Treasury Department, National Economic Council, and Council of Economic Advisers, as well as the White House National Security Council as the administration gauges that cryptocurrencies have ‘economic implications for national security,’ per the Barron’s report.

The White House’s plan is to ‘bring order to the haphazard approach that the government is now using to regulate crypto, the person told Barron’s. Currently, different aspects of the cryptocurrency market are dealt with by different agencies, including the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, but there’s little coordination and consensus when it comes to the classification of the many different assets in the market.

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