The Russian government has taken a cautious approach to cryptocurrencies, president Vladimir Putin said during an annual âhotlineâ on Thursday.
Asked if Russia will have its own cryptocurrency one day, Putin said he doesnât see such an outcome as possible because cryptocurrencies âby definition are beyond the national borders.â
While expressing that caution, he nonetheless admitted that cryptocurrencies are âdeveloping in the worldâ and that Russia should explore the opportunities around the tech. Among the possible uses, he said, was to âavoid various limitations in global finance tradeâ â a suggestion that blockchain could help ease sanctions against Russian banks, companies and individuals imposed in recent years.
Putin also noted during the four-hour annual session that cryptocurrency mining â the energy-intensive process by which new transactions are added to a blockchain, with new coins being âmintedâ in the process â is not regulated, and similarly, cryptocurrencies are not recognized as legal tender within Russia.
The Russian president notably issued a series of mandates last year to Russian officials, calling for regulations around cryptocurrencies, including the countryâs domestic mining sector.
âSomewhere in Japan they are using it, but it doesnât work in other countries,â Putin remarked on Thursday.
His comments come as Russiaâs legislature slowly weighs several measures related to the technology â something that Putin himself has expressed support for in the past.
Three bills regarding blockchain and crypto have been introduced in the Russian parliament, the State Duma, to date. Two of them passed the first round of hearings on May 22 (three rounds are required to pass the bill), one of them named âOn the digital financial assetsâ and the other âOn the digital rightsâ.
Both bills aim to introduce basic blockchain terminology to the Russian legal language, such as tokens and blockchain. They also restrict cashing out of tokens to authorized finance institutions and assign the Bank of Russia as a regulator that should control the crypto trade and ICOs in the country.
One more bill, âOn the distributed national miningâ â which introduces the term âcryptorubleâ â was rejected by legislators.
Michael Komin, an expert for the institutions development with the Center for Strategic Development â a Moscow think tank chaired by Alexei Kudrin, a former head of the Department of Finance and one of the proponents of blockchain technology in Russian establishmentâ- believes that the bills are âhalf-emptyâ because an adequate legal language for blockchain hasnât been created so far.
âThe only thing the parliament can do is to ban the technology as such, but it wonât be approved by the Bank of Russia, Department of Finance and Treasury, which are already using elements of blockchain, and by the President Putinâs advisor Andrei Belousov, â Komin said.
He expects the current blockchain bills to get âleft without movement until better times and finally perish under the piles of other bills.â
Image Credit: Channel One Russia