Blockchain Association CEO Kristin Smith said in a Feb. 22 Bloomberg interview that despite the process being “extremely long” and regulators “stepping in” in the interim, the sector wants U.S. lawmakers to lead crypto legislation.
The leader of the important U.S. business association for crypto advised that the United States Congress take control of crypto legislation. This would make it a more “open process” where lawmakers could examine the market “comprehensively.”
Smith remarked that although regulators are “moving extremely swiftly,” legislation is being developed “behind closed doors,” suggesting that increased industry participation in an “open process” that would be visible to Congress is essential. According to Smith, the problem with regulators enforcing laws and settling disputes is due to “extremely unique facts and conditions.”
Since many people in Washington D.C. who “were close” to former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried and FTX felt “burned” and “betrayed” over the collapse of the cryptocurrency exchange in November 2022, she added that Congress is in a difficult situation at the present.
According to Smith, Congress has been considering stablecoin regulation “since 2019” and the “work has been done.” He is optimistic that it will take place soon in the United States. Before FTX’s demise, she claimed it “came close” to happening in 2022.
In a letter dated February 20 this year and distributed to the G20’s finance ministers and central bank governors, Financial Stability Board (FSB) chair Klaas Knot described how the organization expects to handle major threats to financial stability this year. DeFi and crypto assets occupied a significant position on the FSB’s list of challenges.
According to Knot, the FSB
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