Compliance
Philippines Moves To Regulate Bitcoin; Eyes Cost-Cutting Potential For Remittances

Like Japan, and more recently Australia, the Philippines has reportedly moved to regulate bitcoin exchanges.
The Philippines’ central bank has given the green light to two
bitcoin exchanges to operate as part of broader efforts to
regulate the fast-growing but potentially risky crypto-currency,
according to local media reports.
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas approved the exchanges last week,
the bank’s governor Nestor Espenilla Jr said during a fintech
conference.
“They are local based, but they have international roots,” he
said. “That is the importance of putting them under the
regulatory framework. We are moving to regulate them.”
Bitcoin was created in 2009 by an unidentified person or group
operating under the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto. In the wake of
the 2008 financial tsunami, so-called “cypherpunks” sought to
create a decentralised payment system independent of distrusted
central banks and free of regulatory burden.
A bitcoin exchange is a digital marketplace where traders and
consumers can exchange fiat currencies for bitcoin.
Now, many countries across the world – such as
Australia and Ukraine
– are moving to regulate bitcoin and crypto-currencies more
generally in order to mitigate the risk of them being used to
launder money and fund terrorism and other illicit
activities.
Last January, the Philippines’ central bank issued Circular 944,
a set of guidelines for crypto-currency exchanges, as it
recognised crypto-currencies’ potential to trim fees and
transaction times, particularly for remittances.
Last year, remittances – cash sent home by workers to their
native countries – totalled $26.9 billion in the Philippines,
accounting for 9.8 per cent of the nation’s gross domestic
product, according to the latest data from its central
bank.
Supporters of bitcoin have cheered the crypto-currency for its
low transaction fees. Bitcoin “miners” – powerful computer
systems that verify transactions by solving complex mathematical
problems – are paid a tiny percentage, in bitcoin, of each
transaction they validate for their services.
In comparison, banks charge an average of 13 per cent of the
total remittance amount - the highest fee levied; post offices 9
per cent; and money-transfer operators - such as Western Union -
7 per cent, according to the World Bank.
If a worker is sending home $1,000, and as much as $130 is
subtracted in fees, they and their family will both feel the
bite.