Australia is moving to introduce a new bill that would extend the country's anti-money laundering rules to cover domestic cryptocurrency exchanges.
In a statement this morning, the Ministry of Justice announced that the legislation would bring those exchanges within the jurisdiction of the Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC), the country's chief financial intelligence office.
The effort dates back to mid-2016, when the government released a broad-ranging statement on financial technologies.
As the government explained today:
Australian lawmakers reaffirmed their intention to develop a new law of this nature last year. At the time, the Attorney-General's Department's indicated its support for such a move, calling for existing statutes to receive a legislative update.
It remains to be seen whether the measure – for which a release date has not been revealed – will face opposition once lawmakers begin debating it. As reported earlier this month by CoinDesk, at least a few legislators in Australia want to see bitcoin named as an official currency, indicating that at least some may pushback against the AML effort.
The move comes months after Australia ended a much-maligned "double tax" on bitcoin purchases, a policy shift that was long sought by members of the country's cryptocurrency community.
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