Norges Bank, the central bank of Norway, has released its annual “Financial Infrastructure Report." It devoted a considerable part of the report to crypto assets and the question of whether Norway should depend on international regulatory examples to control its market.
The European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation will come into force in a year or two, and it “will probably also apply to Norway.” However, “the Ministry of Finance will assess EEA relevance and implementation in Norway,” Norges Bank noted. Norway is a member of the European Economic Area but not the EU.
MiCA may not be adequate to all crypto regulatory needs, Norges Bank said:
The bank pointed to shortcomings in decentralized finance regulation as an example of this problem in MiCA.
Related: The state of crypto in Northern Europe: Hostile Scandinavia and vibrant Baltics
The quality of regulation has a psychological effect. “To have an ex-ante disciplinary effect, it is necessary that participants perceive the likelihood of being detected as sufficiently high,” it said. That is relevant to other authorities, but the bank “would contribute to such assessments,” it added.
"The [Norwegian] authorities should consider a national strategy for regulating crypto-asset markets."— Norges Bank, Financial Infrastructure Report 2023, May 25, 2023 https://t.co/b0Z56WdupD pic.twitter.com/DRGHZCX306
Further development of MiCA could be driven by national interests that Norway does not share, the paper said. Therefore, “Norwegian authorities should assess whether to proceed more quickly rather than wait for international regulatory solutions. ”
Without such a step, “private entities” could have undue influence over Norwegian regulation such as taxation,
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