In December 2021, the initial proposal was approved in the country’s Chamber of Deputies, which forms part of the legislative power, and was immediately sent to the Senate for review. The Commission on Economic Matters (CAE (NYSE:CAE)) approved the proposal in February.
In case the Senate approves the bill, the proposal will be sent again to the Chamber of Deputies and then for a final sanction, to Brazil’s president Jair Bolsonaro.
What Could Change With the ‘Bitcoin Law’?
Senator Flavio Arns highlighted the bill’s features:
The “Bitcoin Law” has three main objectives. The first is to “give security to the virtual assets market,” the second, is “to protect the economic-financial order,” and the third is “to protect the Brazilian investor.”
According to the senator, the bill isn’t an impediment, but instead, it “seeks to bring greater confidence to investors and, consequently, bring greater stability to companies operating in this segment.”
He says that the most urgent part of the proposal is to define a state body or entity responsible for regulating and supervising the crypto-asset market. For him, that entity will probably be the Central Bank of Brazil.
On The Flipside
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Source: Cryptocurrency - investing.com