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Can the EU gain an advantage in the global competition for cryptocurrency regulation? The head of the EU competition authority recently offered a somewhat pessimistic view: the EU is falling into a 'race to the bottom' trap.
This perspective is worth considering. In the rapidly evolving global regulatory landscape, governments around the world are pondering the same question: should they adopt strict regulatory standards or relax restrictions to attract the digital asset industry?
The EU's stance is relatively cautious. MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation) reflects Europe's regulatory philosophy—comprehensive, strict, and thorough. But the issue is that as the US, Singapore, the UAE, and others actively lower barriers and compete for leadership in the crypto ecosystem, will the EU's high-standard regulatory framework instead raise startup costs and drive innovative companies to more regulator-friendly regions?
The concerns of competition policy officials are not unfounded. If the EU tightens regulations excessively, it may face a dilemma: either lower standards to stay competitive (sacrificing standards just to compete), or lose market share and talent. This is precisely the 'race to the bottom' trap.
However, there is another perspective: maintaining high standards might actually be a long-term competitive advantage. After all, investors and users are increasingly valuing security and compliance over mere freedom.