EU Finance Ministers Place Defacto Ban on Libra
Libra’s ongoing organizational snags and run-ins with regulators continue into December, as EU finance ministers agreed Thursday that Libra cannot be launched in the EU until concerns are adequately addressed. The finance ministers issued a joint statement citing regulatory “challenges and risks.”
Also Read: Libra Testnet Fails to Impress as New Legislation Looms Lawmakers Still Reluctant
Just last month news.Bitcoin.com reported on the “Managed Stablecoins are Securities Act of 2019,” proposed legislation in the U.S. which seeks to regulate libra as a security, going against Libra representatives’ stated vision for the project. Project head David Marcus has loosely compared Libra to something more like a Paypal-type payments platform. Though devs are reporting notable successes with the testnet, and a 2020 release is still in view, regulatory worries continue to crop up. Most recently, from EU finance ministers via the EU Council and Commission.
The ministers agreed in a joint statement Thursday that: No global stablecoin arrangement should begin operation in the European Union until the legal, regulatory and oversight challenges and risks have been adequately identified and addressed.
Like most official statements surrounding the Libra project thus far, the EU finance ministers are careful to give lip service to potential benefits. “Technological innovation can produce great economic benefits for the financial sector, promoting competition and financial inclusion, broadening consumer choice, increasing efficiency and delivering cost savings for financial institutions and the economy at large,” the statement reads.
However, promotion of concepts like financial inclusion is soon tempered with commonly repeated regulatory lines when it comes to cryptocurrencies: At the same time, these arrangements pose multifaceted challenges and risks related for example to consumer protection, privacy, taxation, cyber security and operational resilience, money laundering, terrorism financing, market integrity, governance and legal certainty.
The statement ends by turning the focus away from private solutions to state-sponsored initiatives like Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC) and praising the European Central Bank (ECB). “We note that the ECB and other central banks and national competent authorities will explore further the ongoing digital transformation of the payment system and, in particular, the consequences of initiatives such as “stablecoins”. We welcome that central banks in cooperation with other relevant authorities continue to assess the costs and benefits of central bank digital currencies…”
Libra Struggles On
The joint statement comes as the Commission is reportedly working on stablecoin regulation already, with VP Valdis Dombrovskis saying in a speech: “Today the Ecofin endorsed a joint statement with the Commission on stablecoins. These are part of a much broader universe of crypto assets … A number of Member States like France, Germany or Malta introduced national crypto asset laws, but most people agree with the advice of the European Supervisory Authorities that these markets go beyond borders and so we need a common European framework.”
When the EU and governments worldwide will finally be ready for Libra, if ever, remains to be seen. As a large chunk of major league members have left the Libra Association already — such as Paypal, Visa and Mastercard in recent months — the project has no shortage of challenges as it continues pushing forward.
What do you think of the EU Finance Ministers’ joint statement? Let us know in the comments section below.
Images credits: Shutterstock.
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Graham Smith is an American expat living in Japan, and the founder of Voluntary Japan—an initiative dedicated to spreading the philosophies of unschooling, individual self-ownership, and economic freedom in the land of the rising sun. Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.