The legislators of the two largest political parties in South Korea have unveiled bills on stables. The authors of invoices agree on many points, but interest payment plans seem to be a collision point.
The South Korean Newsprime media reported that the Democratic Party in power (DP) and the main Popular Opposition Power Party (PPP) both unveiled their bills, written by individual legislators on July 28.
The DP MP, a Do-Geol bill, is appointed the law on the emission and distribution of stable digital assets at value.

The Kim Eun-Hye of the PPP, on the other hand, qualified its invoice as an act on payment innovation with digital assets at a fixed price.
Stablecoin bills: points of agreement
The two bills provide that KRW stabbles are incorporated within the framework of the national financial institutional system.
And the two draft laws reveal much more common ground between the parties. The two bills offer the place of the Financial Services Commission (FSC) in charge of Won Stablecoins regulations.
If the bills are adopted, the FSC would be authorized to impose rules on the issue, distribution and redemption of stablecoins.
It will also have the power to impose emergency orders on operators if they have concerns about market disruption or user damage.
Kim and AHN’s bills both stipulate that the FSC will become the only body issuing licenses for KRW coins.
All potential transmitters must be regulated financial institutions or joint action companies. Companies abroad will only be allowed to request permits if they have branches or sales offices based in South Korea.
In addition, all transmitters must prove that they have equity worth at least 5 billion wons ($ 3.6 million). They must also have dedicated IT teams and employ staff related to stable.

Inflation: a snack point
The question of payments of interest, however, turns out to be division. The DP wishes to prohibit paid stable stables to avoid market disturbances.
But the opposition PPP believes that paid tokens of interest would increase the competitiveness of the stables -won.
Kim explained that interest payments would help stimulate the growth of stablescoins won abroad.
But AHN’s bill completely prohibits such payments, warning that they could disrupt monetary policy and financial markets.
Opinions on the issue are divided “even within the industry,” wrote the media. An unnamed national industrial industrial initiate told Newsprime:
“In the case of dollars stables, payments of interest would make titles under US law. (…) I think other countries can design regulations for stabbed in accordance with their own laws. ”
South Korean companies, including dozens of commercial banks and technological operators, rush to create Stablecoin emission plans with Seoul about to regulate in the coming weeks.
Seoul reacts in part to rapid progress of the genius law in the United States. Last month, American newspapers reported that Amazon and Walmart were trying to launch Stablecoins to help save costs.
This led regulators in East Asia to accelerate their own stablecoin regulations, apparently determined not to delay in the Fiat-Piged token breed.
In South Korea, the Kakao and Naver Internet giants are about to react, with credit card issuers such as the Lotte card also.
The position of larger parts of South Korea deploys Stablecoin invoices, Clash On Interest Pays Plans appeared first on Cryptonews.


