Belarus adopts crypto-currency law to woo foreign
investors
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[December 22, 2017]
By Andrei Makhovsky
MINSK (Reuters) - Belarus has legalized
transactions in crypto-currencies, part of a drive to foster private
sector growth and attract foreign investment by liberalizing parts of
its Soviet-style economy.
President Alexander Lukashenko signed a decree on the move on Thursday,
his press service said.
Bitcoin, the world's most popular crypto-currency, has lost a third of
its value <BTC=BTSP> since hitting a record high of close to $20,000 on
Sunday, but its supporters dismiss warnings over volatility and say it
is the start of a new monetary system not dependent on central banks.
"All smart and intelligent people know what stability and order are,"
state news agency BelTA quoted Lukashenko as saying earlier this month.
"They're all trying to reach that shore. We're prepared to arrange a
dock and even a harbor."
The former Soviet republic, squeezed between Russia and the European
Union, is still dominated by the state, weighed down by bureaucracy and
inefficient state-owned enterprises, and dependent on Russian money and
subsidies.
But Lukashenko, a former collective farm manager who once called the
internet "garbage", has introduced some reforms to improve the business
climate and shore up the economy after recession in 2015 and 2016.
Belarus has developed some globally recognized IT brands, belying an
image of a country stuck in a Soviet time warp.
The decree is designed to attract digital coin entrepreneurs, who are
moving businesses to locations more welcoming to crypto-currencies as
they face intensifying scrutiny from regulators over digital currency
fund-raising, known as initial coin offerings.
"The decree is a breakthrough for Belarus," Anton Myakishev, the head of
Microsoft's <MSFT.O> Belarus office, told Reuters.
"It gives the industry the possibility to make a leap forward in its
development and allows foreign capital the possibility to come to
Belarus and work in comfortable conditions."
AVOIDING RED TAPE
The decree legalizes initial coin offerings and transactions in
crypto-currencies, including their exchange for traditional currencies
on Belarussian exchanges, while all trades will be tax-free for the next
five years.
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Employees work at Kino-mo R&D Centre in Minsk, Belarus, December 12,
2017. REUTERS/Vasily Fedosenko
It also allows local IT companies to operate in part under English law - a boon
to potential foreign investors, who can struggle to navigate the Belarussian
legal system.
"We regularly faced legal problems. When a Western company buys a Belarussian
company they try to structure the deal outside Belarus," said Denis Aleinikov,
senior partner in a private law firm Aleinikov and Partners in Minsk and the
main author of the decree.
"Investors don't want to deal with Belarussian legislation," he told Reuters.
Viktor Prokopenya, a prominent investor in the Belarussian IT sector, said
Reuters the legislation and other measures showed the government fully supported
the industry.
The Belarussian IT sector has flourished despite the country's wider economic
slump, attracting foreign workers, expatriate Belarussians and locals to jobs
that pay about five times the average wage.
Dozens of software companies operate in Minsk's high-tech IT park, including
U.S.-based EPAM Systems <EPAM.N>, founded by two Belarussians in 1993.
Belarussian software engineers are also behind the Japanese-controlled Viber
messenger and the popular video game World of Tanks.
The bright outlook for the IT industry is not matched in other sectors of the
Belarussian economy, which remains hamstrung by loss-making state-owned
companies that have seen little or no reform since the collapse of the Soviet
Union.
The economy is expected to return to growth of 1.7 percent this year, but the
International Monetary Fund in November said growth will remain around 2 percent
annually over the next few years if state-run heavy industries don't modernize.
(Writing by Alessandra Prentice, editing by Matthias Williams and Timothy
Heritage)
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