Newsletter Newsletters Events Events Podcasts Videos Africanews
Loader
Advertisement

Indonesia plans to tighten oversight of crypto market, task OJK with regulation

Indonesia plans to tighten oversight of crypto market, task OJK with regulation
Indonesia plans to tighten oversight of crypto market, task OJK with regulation Copyright  Thomson Reuters 2022
Copyright Thomson Reuters 2022
By Reuters
Published on
Share this article Comments
Share this article Close Button

JAKARTA - Indonesia plans to move the regulation, supervision and oversight of cryptocurrency investments to the Financial Service Authority (OJK) to better protect investors, its finance minister said on Thursday.

Currently, the Trade Ministry and the Commodity Futures Trading Regulatory Agency jointly oversee cryptocurrency in Southeast Asia's largest economy, where there has been a boom in such investments.

The new plan, laid out by Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati, is part of financial sector legislation that is being debated in parliament.

The use of cryptocurrency assets as a means of payment is illegal in Indonesia, but transactions for investment are allowed in the commodities market.

Sri Mulyani said as of June, there were 15.1 million cryptocurrency investors in the country, an exponential rise from just 4 million in 2020. That compared with 9.1 million investors in the stock market as of June.

"We need to build a mechanism of supervision and investor protection that is quite strong and reliable especially for investment instruments that are high risk," she told a parliamentary hearing, noting that the cryptocurrency market has faced turbulence recently.

The new bill would empower OJK to regulate and supervise "digital asset activities, including crypto assets and financial sector technology innovation," Sri Mulyani added.

Parliament officially submitted the bill to the government in September. Thursday's meeting was to present the government's first response and any additions to the proposed bill.

The bill will be passed into law after both the legislative and executive branches agreed on all provisions.

Parliament's proposals also contain provisions to widen the central bank's mandate to include economic growth in addition to price stability.

Sri Mulyani said she supported the proposal, but also underlined the importance of the independence of financial regulators, especially that of BI.

"It is important for us to continue to provide signals that independence and credibility of institutions ... are strengthened and maintained because this is the most important asset to maintain financial system stability," she said.

Go to accessibility shortcuts
Share this article Comments

Read more