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South Korea Overhauls 1950 State Asset Laws to Include Crypto

South Korea is dismantling a 74-year-old legislative framework to incorporate virtual assets and intellectual property into its national balance sheet. The Ministry of Economy and Finance announced the National Asset Basic Act, shifting the government’s focus from mere land ownership toward active, value-driven management of modern digital holdings.

South Korea Overhauls 1950 State Asset Laws to Include Crypto

The current State Property Act, a relic from 1950, restricts state assets to physical real estate, leaving no room for the complexities of the digital economy. By replacing this with a comprehensive framework, officials aim to establish specialized development standards for intangible assets. This transition marks a departure from traditional preservation models, prioritizing instead the extraction of economic value from government-owned digital resources.

This legislative shift complements a broader economic roadmap for 2026 that cements blockchain infrastructure as a pillar of national growth. While artificial intelligence commands a larger share of current funding, the ministry remains committed to finalizing the Digital Asset Basic Act. This pending legislation will define business conduct standards and create a legal pathway for won-pegged stablecoins and spot cryptocurrency exchange-traded funds.

Practical implementation is already moving beyond the drafting phase. A pilot program linking tokenized government bonds with a central bank digital currency is slated for 2027. Simultaneously, Gyeonggi Province is preparing an eight-month trial starting in August. Led by security firm ZKrypto, this experiment will utilize zero-knowledge proofs to test stablecoin circulation and fraud prevention, providing a real-world stress test for the country’s evolving digital asset strategy.

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