The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Uproar over crackdown on cryptocurr­encies

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SEOUL: With a tech-savvy population quick to adopt the latest gadgets and a young generation facing dim prospects in the convention­al workplace, South Korea has been a fertile ground for virtual currencies.

But the country’s swift embrace of bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies has been met with an equally swift backlash by regulators, who have gone so far as to propose outright bans on trading.

With markets around the world watching, South Korea has become a fault line between a generation that sees cryptocurr­encies as a way to a better life, and government officials who have likened the market to gambling and warned that it encourages illicit behaviour.

On Thursday the Justice Minister, Park Sang-ki, sent global bitcoin prices temporaril­y plummeting and virtual coin markets into turmoil when he said regulators were preparing legislatio­n to halt cryptocurr­ency trading.

As of yesterday, a petition on the website of the presidenti­al Blue House had drawn more than 120,000 signatures opposing the move.

Heavy Internet traffic briefly crashed the site.

The online uprising against the government’s plans puts President Moon Jae-in a tough spot, and his office was quick to say a ban is just one proposal under considerat­ion.

“The latest idea to ban it all seems to have come out of a fear that when the bubble bursts and things go wrong, it will be all on the government,” said Yun Changhyun, an economics professor at University of Seoul.

With the youth unemployme­nt rate three times the national average and a growing income gap between rich and poor, many young Koreans worry about their

The latest idea to ban it all seems to have come out of a fear that when the bubble bursts and things go wrong, it will be all on the government.

economic prospects.

“Tax it as much as you want but don’t shut it down. My life depends on it,” one petitioner wrote on the Blue House website.

Lee Min-kyung, a 25-year old student in a Seoul-based graduate school said she earned about 18 million won (US$16,973.93), double her initial investment in bitcoin. She said the government is showing haphazard responses simply because officials have “no idea.”

“They say the purpose of the regulation is to curb speculativ­e moves, but it makes me just think the government simply doesn’t understand what the market is,” Lee said.

More than 30 per cent of 941 office workers surveyed in December by Saramin, a South Koreabased job portal, said they traded cryptocurr­encies.

The respondent­s had an average of 5.7 million won (US$5,357.14) invested in virtual currencies, and a majority of them said they began trading because they saw it as the fastest way to earn money.

That trend has earned critics on the street as well as in government offices.

Koh Young-sam, a 56-year old mechanic in Seoul, warned that the craze would collapse.

“Young people shouldn’t be lured into this kind of scam. There is always something fishy about things that grow this fast,” Koh said.

South Korea is not alone in struggling to figure out how to tax and regulate online currencies, many of which are designed to provide anonymity for transactio­ns.

In September last year, China cracked down on cryptocurr­ency trading, citing what officials saw as broader risks to the country’s economy.

As South Korea accounts for about 15 per cent of global bitcoin trading, according to the website Coinhills.com, how regulators approach the issue will likely have internatio­nal effects.

The local price of bitcoin in South Korea bounced back yesterday to 19.3 million won (US$17,481.20) from as low as 17.5 million won (US$16,445.82) according to Bithumb, the nation’s second-largest cryptocurr­ency exchange.

On the Luxembourg-based Bitstamp, bitcoin stood at US$13,709 after touching US$12,800 the prior day.

Park Chong-hoon, an economist at Standard Chartered Bank in Seoul, said, “South Koreans find it hard to deal with the jealousy from watching their neighbours getting rich fast.”

It is a sentiment echoed by many. Scepticism of ‘get-rich-quick’ schemes among South Korean officials has coloured past forays by internatio­nal finance into the country.

In the mid-2000s the US private equity fund Lone Star faced raids of its offices and a years-long legal battle with the South Korean government after the foreign fund made millions of dollars buying and selling a controllin­g stake in a major South Korean bank. —

Yun Chang-hyun, economics professor at University of Seoul

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