Golden Finance reported that Ripple Chief Legal Officer (CLO) Stuart Alderoty discussed cryptocurrency regulation in the United States. Alderoty said we need to stop putting politics above sound policy in the U.S. and focus on the way Singapore, the U.K., the European Union and Dubai have clear frameworks and permits.
Alderoty explained that countries and regions outside the U.S. have "reasonable" cryptocurrency regulations, citing Singapore, the United Kingdom, the European Union, Dubai, Brazil, Australia, and Japan as examples. He stressed that these countries have "reasonable regulatory frameworks that don't drive this innovation but want to say, hey, look, if you want to come into our country and develop this innovation, you can do it, as long as you meet our strict regulatory regime."
In the United States, by contrast, we are lost because our politics and power take precedence over sound policy. Some U.S. agencies vie for control of technology from a regulatory perspective rather than focusing on the right policy outcomes.