A leading South Korean professor says that restrictive crypto laws are stopping Web3 unicorns from growing in the nation.
The expert also claimed that banks and other financial market players should be allowed to move more freely in the crypto market.
According to EDaily, the Web3 comments came from the Hoseo University Professor Kim Hyeong-joong, who also serves as the President of the Fintech Society.
Speaking at a Web 3.0 policy seminar this week, Kim said:
“Some 5% of the world’s unicorn companies are operating in the Web3 sector. But there are no South Korean companies among that number.”
The professor claimed:
“This is because the government banned financial institutions from holding cryptoassets while calming the [crypto] craze of 2017.”
This, he claimed, had led to a lack of venture capital investment in domestic Web3 companies.
Domestic Web3 firms, said Kim, have been left “impoverished.” He blamed Seoul for “blocking growth” of all things crypto-related.
The professor pointed to CB Insights research published in April, which made note of the fact that there are currently 1,206 unicorn companies in the world.
Of this number, 63, or 5%, were identified as Web3 companies.
But no South Korean companies made this list, Kim stated.
He said:
“While many Web3 unicorns are appearing around the world, South Korea is missing a precious opportunity.”
Meanwhile, per ZDNet Korea, Kim also took aim at the government’s stance on crypto buying.
He noted that the Bank for International Settlements (BIS)-affiliated Basel Board of Banking Standards has unveiled a regulatory bill that would allow banks to hold up to 2% of their total assets in crypto.
But as of 2017, South Korean financial companies were banned from holding or investing in
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