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The South Korean government has reportedly de facto banned all government officials from holding and trading cryptocurrencies. Even if their crypto activities are not related to their jobs, public officials can still be subject to disciplinary actions.
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Public Officials De Facto Banned from Crypto
South Korea has reportedly âissued a ban on virtual currency holdings and transactions to all government officials,â Maeil Business Newspaper reported.
According to the document entitled âVirtual currency holdings and transaction-related information for civil servants,â the publication elaborated:
The personnel department requested that they [civil servants] refrain from holding and trading virtual currency even if there is no job relevanceâŠThis is the first time the government has formulated a virtual currency ban for all public officials.
Disciplinary Actions Encouraged but Not Defined
The publication quoted the personnel affairs department explaining that if employees trade digital currencies for their personal benefit, they âare in violation of the prohibition of forbearance obligations under the civil servantsâ law,â especially if trading is done during work hours. âEven if there is no job relevance,â the officials âcould be subject to discipline,â the news outlet conveyed and quoted a high-ranking official explaining:
The disciplinary issue is not a quantitative cut, but a problem of interpretation of the law. Each ministry should judge the possibility of discipline.
Additional Efforts
The Korean Financial Services Commission (FSC), the Fair Trade Commission, and other related departments have already warned their employees âto refrain from investing in virtual currency,â the news outlet added. Furthermore, the head of the Office of Policy Coordinator, Hong Nam, told all public officials to do the same in January.
Last month, the Korean Anti-Corruption & Civil Rights Commission issued the âCode of Conduct Guide to Cryptocurrencyâ to all government departments and public agencies.
This document adds cryptocurrency to Article 12 of the Civil Servant Code of Conduct, prohibiting public officials from using âthe information learned during their duties to assist in trading or investingâ in cryptocurrency. In addition, the FSS, which is an independent agency, said that it will review its own code of conduct.
Earlier this year, a bill was introduced to require public officials to declare their cryptocurrency investments. It followed accusations that some government employees were involved in insider trading using undisclosed knowledge of future regulations as well as market manipulation.
Do you think Korean government officials should be banned from holding and trading crypto? Let us know in the comments section below.
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The post Korean Government Officials De Facto Banned from Holding and Trading Crypto appeared first on Bitcoin News.
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