Page 1 of 1

"One of the main approaches is to take a

Posted: Mon Jan 20, 2025 6:58 am
by tanjimajuha20
he first question was asked by State Duma deputy from United Russia Mikhail Sheremet. He asked whether miners would have benefits for IT companies and how mining profits would be controlled. Anatoly Aksakov answered his colleague's questions in the negative. According to him, there is no point in establishing benefits for miners, since this is a profitable business that creates problems for the population in regions with electricity shortages. Answering a romania whatsapp resource question about taxation, he said that the Russian government is preparing proposals with different approaches.
portion of the income depending on the electricity consumed. It is very difficult to determine the profit of a mining enterprise, and the key principle is the idea that "the more electricity is consumed, the more crypto is created," noted Anatoly Aksakov.

Communist Party deputy Oleg Smolin noted that Russia is experiencing enormous difficulties with international payments and asked to what extent the digital ruble or cryptocurrencies can be used to overcome them. Answering this question, the author of the bill said that the law "On digital financial assets" is already in force in the Russian Federation and cryptocurrency is already used to pay for transactions.

Deputy Olga Pilipenko asked Anatoly Aksakov: who will provide information on transactions with digital currencies? Will a separate government agency or a special subordinate organization be created for this? She received the answer that the Ministry of Digital Development will exercise control on the part of the government, and the Central Bank will be responsible for everything related to financial markets.

Anatoly Wasserman, a deputy of the Fair Russia party, noted that the cryptocurrency generation is based on a chain of blocks that reflect all payments. He expressed concerns that information from this distributed registry could end up in the hands of Russia's opponents, who will try to take action against both cryptocurrency producers and the partners receiving it. Answering the question, Anatoly Aksakov noted that the distributed registry already exists and records transactions, but it only includes participants in the transactions and there are no unnecessary or unwanted persons there.

"The volume of this market is huge, and at the same time you propose to consider everything today. How appropriate is the rush? What is the opinion of market participants?" asked Andrey Kuznetsov, a deputy from "A Just Russia".

"We closely interacted with the market and its players when developing the bill," answered Anatoly Aksakov. "The market itself, represented by miners, asks us to pass laws as quickly as possible in order to work within the legal framework."