[Bit推] The attitude of the Central Bank of Russia has softened. In a recent statement, the Central Bank governor admitted that the expansion of the Bitcoin Mining industry is contributing to the country's economic rise and may even strengthen the international competitiveness of the ruble.
This transition is very interesting. It is indeed difficult to accurately measure the actual impact of Mining, as illegal and gray area miners account for a significant proportion of the industry. But she clearly stated: “Mining is indeed one of the important factors supporting the rise of the ruble exchange rate.”
What is the background? A few years ago, the Central Bank of Russia was unfriendly towards cryptocurrencies and openly advocated banning Mining and exchange operations. However, in the past two years, the tone in Moscow has changed. The government has started encouraging miners to set up factories in areas with surplus electricity, making full use of idle energy resources.
From opposition to acceptance, this not only reflects a loosening of attitudes but also a re-evaluation of the economic effects of Mining by various countries. The activation of idle electricity resources, the creation of local jobs, and the increase in foreign exchange income—these tangible economic accounts are rewriting the policy logic of governments around the world.
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DAOplomacy
· 10h ago
ngl, the whole "mining strengthens the ruble" angle feels like institutional copium... but honestly? non-trivial externalities are hard to price in anyway. path dependency suggests moscow's just following what everyone else figured out three years ago. the grey market miners probably aren't even counted in their models lol.
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OnChain_Detective
· 10h ago
wait hold up... so russia's central bank suddenly does a 180 on mining? let me pattern-match this real quick—suspicious activity detected. they went from "ban crypto" to "mining strengthens the ruble" overnight? that's giving major narrative shift vibes ngl
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 10h ago
Wow, the speed of this change by the Central Bank of Russia... it's really realism, once calling for a ban on Mining now relying on it to support the Exchange Rate? Doesn't it hurt to slap your face, haha.
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LiquidationWatcher
· 10h ago
Russia's recent actions are truly remarkable. They were initially looking to ban mining, but then realized they could make money and changed their stance. The reality, everyone.
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BTCWaveRider
· 10h ago
Wow, the turn in Russia is a bit fast, just a while ago they wanted to ban Mining.
By the way, is idle electricity really that valuable? It feels like being forced to live off someone else.
How does the Central Bank governor's words feel a bit watered down? Everyone knows that gray Miners account for a large part.
Dad Russia finally figured it out, Mining can indeed recover losses.
Hey, this logic doesn't make sense, Mining supports the ruble? I find it a bit ridiculous.
The economic situation is so bad that even Mining has to rely on it.
A reversal, a reversal, after so many twists and turns, in the end, we still have to embrace the crypto world.
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DeFi_Dad_Jokes
· 10h ago
Ha, the Russian Central Bank has been slapped in the face by reality, right? They were adamantly opposed before, but now that the ruble has risen, they've changed their tune. So realistic, haha.
The Russian Central Bank changes its stance: Bitcoin mining becomes a new driving force for the appreciation of the ruble.
[Bit推] The attitude of the Central Bank of Russia has softened. In a recent statement, the Central Bank governor admitted that the expansion of the Bitcoin Mining industry is contributing to the country's economic rise and may even strengthen the international competitiveness of the ruble.
This transition is very interesting. It is indeed difficult to accurately measure the actual impact of Mining, as illegal and gray area miners account for a significant proportion of the industry. But she clearly stated: “Mining is indeed one of the important factors supporting the rise of the ruble exchange rate.”
What is the background? A few years ago, the Central Bank of Russia was unfriendly towards cryptocurrencies and openly advocated banning Mining and exchange operations. However, in the past two years, the tone in Moscow has changed. The government has started encouraging miners to set up factories in areas with surplus electricity, making full use of idle energy resources.
From opposition to acceptance, this not only reflects a loosening of attitudes but also a re-evaluation of the economic effects of Mining by various countries. The activation of idle electricity resources, the creation of local jobs, and the increase in foreign exchange income—these tangible economic accounts are rewriting the policy logic of governments around the world.