Iran Progresses Towards National Cryptocurrency with Finished Draft

Iran has prepared a draft of its new national cryptocurrency, according to local news source Financial Tribune.
Supreme Cyberspace Council
It was by the country’s National Cyberspace Center on instructions from President Hassan Rouhani.

According to Saeed Mahdiyoun, an official at the Supreme Cyberspace Council, the Central Bank of Iran will publish its stance on the matter at the end of September. Meanwhile, the SCC is actively pursuing the development of the cryptocurrency.
Iranian banks were banned from dealing with cryptocurrency in April 2018, as the central bank was concerned about money laundering. The purpose of the national cryptocurrency will be to international sanctions.
Money or bombs?
Between 2006 and 2015, and especially from 2012, sanctions were imposed on Iran by the UN because the Islamic republic kept trying to develop nuclear weapons. An agreement was signed in 2015 whereby some sanctions were in return for Iran stopping with these ambitions. In , the US withdrew from this agreement, and some predict that the Iranian rial will lose 57 percent of its value by the end of 2018.
In response, Iranians have purchased approximately $2.5 billion worth of cryptocurrency, according to Mohammad Reza Pourebrahimi, Chairman of the Economic Commission of the Parliament of Iran. Part of the reason for this is because SWIFT, the international money transfer service, stopped servicing the country.
In July, sources reported that the government was Bitcoin exchanges because Rouhani doesn’t want money leaving the country. However, people are turning to Bitcoin as they consider it a than the fiat currency in such trying times. This is something that we have seen happen in other countries too, such as and .
Venezuela has already developed a national cryptocurrency, actually intending it to replace its now-worthless bolivar. The is pegged to the value of oil, a commodity in which Venezuela is rich. The Banco Central de Venezuela has even released a mobile phone application that converts bolivars to ‘bolivar soberanos’, a new currency whose value is pegged to the Petro. According to CCN, the application has been downloaded more than 10,000 times.

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