The Bank of Russia has announced plans to âanalyse and evaluateâ potential applications of blockchain technology within finance.
The countryâs central bank revealed on Sunday it had established a working group that will provide analysis of âadvanced technologies and innovations in the financial marketâ, with the goal being to study distributed ledger technologies, as well as developments in mobile, payments and other areas.
The news comes at a time when certain public entities in Russia are supporting a possible ban on monetary surrogates, a classification that includes digital currencies. Officials from groups including Russiaâs Ministry of Finance, the government agency overseeing financial policy; members of the state duma, one of the countryâs legislatures; and its Investigative Committee, which investigates criminal offenses, have all previously voiced concerns about the technology.
Russiaâs central bank, by contrast, has been more positive about the technology, issuing more measured statements as far back as 2014.
Olga Skorobogatov, the Bank of Russiaâs Deputy Chairman, and the leader of the new group, said in a statement:
âThe development of modern financial market[s] is inseparable from the development of financial technology.â
Financial services is quickly digitising, and new business models, ecosystems and market participants are âchanging the behavior of consumers of financial servicesâ, Skorobogatov added.
The working group plans to hold regular meetings with representatives of banks, self-regulatory organisations and other financial market participants to discuss the use of new financial technologies.
The Bank of Russiaâs head, Elvira Nabiullina, earlier this month announced that the bank was âclosely monitoringâ blockchain technology with the aim of âdeveloping its own approach to financial innovationâ.
Sundayâs announcement also comes hot on the heels of a report from Russiaâs official news agency Tass last week, which claimed that the country ranks fifth for number of cryptocurrency users globally.
Users of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies now number 200,000, with only the US, China and Germany having higher numbers, said deputy chairman of the Russian State Duma committee for security and anti-corruption, Andrei Lugovoi [Ed âhis figures actually making Russia fourth, not fifth].
Lugovoi noted that, while the central bank had previously held a somewhat negative stance towards cryptocurrencies, it was now in favour of a âcareful approach to bitcoin, and saw a serious economic potentialâ in the technology.
The Ministry of Finance, on the other hand, has made a number of statements condemning bitcoin, though it has conceded the potential use case for blockchains in finance.
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