The Australian government has announced an ambitious approach to the whole government to regulate and integrate digital assets into the broader economy, inspired by the work carried out in the European Union (EU) and Singapore.
In a white paper published by the Australian Treasury, the country’s government has declared that it will adopt tokenization, active real world (RWAS) and digital currencies of the Central Bank (CBDC) as part of a wider push to modernize its financial system.
While excluding a retail CBDC for the moment, the government considers a wholesale CBDC version and a tokenized regulation infrastructure as a key to unlocking market efficiency and wider access to assets.
The government says the Australian Treasury, the Australian Securities and Investment Commission, as well as the Reserve Bank of Australia plan to launch pilot tests that use tokenized money, including stablecoins, to settle transactions on wholesale markets.
“Tokenized asset markets may be able to increase automation, reduce the risk of settlement, reduce dependence on financial intermediaries, simplify negotiation processes, reduce transaction costs and provide wider access to traditionally illiquid assets,” said the report.
The White Paper also presents a license structure for Crypto exchanges, which will be known in Australia under the name of digital active platforms (DAPS).
DAP operators will have to comply with financial services obligations such as capital adequacy and disclosure requirements while also using third -party guards to store customer assets.
The government also plans to respond to the concerns of the deduction industry through its DAP license regime, he said in the White Paper, in order to allow banking partners to better engage in risk management.
This anti-banking effort in Australia follows American hearings on the subject, where the law of the company of Senator Tim Scott seeks to prevent regulators from using the “risk of reputation” to prevent cryptographic companies from accessing bank rails.