Crypto: Israel Crypto Industry Pushes Regulatory Changes Amid Strong Public...

Crypto: Israel Crypto Industry Pushes Regulatory Changes Amid Strong Public...

Reform of Israel's digital asset regulations may add 70,000 jobs and $38 billion to the country's GDP, according to KPMG.

The Israeli Crypto Blockchain & Web 3.0 Companies Forum last week launched a lobbying effort to push regulatory reforms that research from KPMG says may add 120 billion shekels ($38.36 billion) to the country’s economy by 2035 and create 70,000 new jobs.

At a Feb. 3 event in Tel Aviv, Forum leader Nir Hirshman-Rub said there is broad public support for legislation that would relax rules on stablecoins and tokenization, along with simplifying tax compliance requirements.

In the wake of the US-brokered ceasefire of the Gaza war, 2026 is seen as a “defining year” for the local digital assets industry, Hirshman-Rub said.

“The Israeli public is already there and the politicians need to act,” Hirshman-Rub told Cointelegraph on the sidelines of the Tel Aviv event. “More than 25% of the public already has had crypto dealings in the last five years and more than 20% currently hold digital assets,” he said, citing the KPMG research.

An October Chainalysis report showed that the G-20 country’s crypto economy has showed steady growth, with inflows topping $713 billion last year. Those levels reflect a sharp increase in crypto volumes in the aftermath of the October 2023 Hamas attacks, which were sustained by strong retail activity, the report said.

Israeli companies, such as Fireblocks and Starkware, have established leadership positions in the global digital assets landscape and are among the Forum’s sponsors. According to NGO Startup Nation Central, more than 160 locally founded companies have attracted more than 5% of the $30 billion invested worldwide in the sector, employing more than 2,500, primarily in the greater Tel Aviv area.

“The problem is that once a company here disclosed that it deals with digital assets, Israeli banks refuse to serve the company or require the company’s attorneys to make an impossible declaration that funds originating in a digital asset will not be deposited in an Israeli bank account,” said Hirshman-Rub. “It may not be outright refusal, but simply dragging their feet, adding demands in a never-ending due diligence process.”

Related: EU tokenization companies push for DLT pilot changes amid US momentum

Among other barriers that the group seeks to reform is an income tax ordinance that penalizes token distribution to employees as stock options. While traditional stock options provided to employees are taxed

Source: CoinTelegraph