匈牙利在监管政策上发生逆转,不再将加密货币定性为犯罪
Hungary Backs Away From Crypto Criminalization In Regulatory U-Turn

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/hungary-backs-away-crypto-criminalization-regulatory-u-turn

匈牙利正准备全面改革其严格的数字资产框架,扭转前总理欧尔班(Viktor Orbán)实施的严苛政策。此前,这些政策将无牌照加密货币交易及大额交易定为犯罪,违者最高可判处八年监禁,这导致 Revolut 等大型平台被迫暂停服务,并引发了欧盟的调查。 政府发言人安妮塔·科博尔(Anita Kobol)与科学技术部长佐尔坦·塔纳奇(Zoltán Tanács)宣布,新政府打算将加密货币活动非罪化,并使国内法律与欧盟的《加密资产市场监管法案》(MiCA)接轨。官员们称此前的立法是“出于政治动机”,并表示希望效仿爱沙尼亚更具创新友好型的监管环境,以吸引国际平台回归。 这一政策转变反映了全球向监管趋同发展的趋势。匈牙利通过摒弃惩罚性措施、转而采用标准化的 MiCA 框架,旨在减少合规阻力、恢复市场参与度,并解决与欧盟之间的监管冲突。尽管尚未确定立法改革的正式时间表,但这一转向标志着匈牙利在融入更广阔的欧洲数字资产生态系统方面迈出了重要一步。

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原文

Authored by Micah Zimmerman via BitcoinMagazine.com,

Hungary is dismantling the restrictive digital asset framework introduced under former Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, a policy overhaul that will decriminalize crypto trading and eliminate the prison sentences that had driven major platforms from the country, government spokesperson Anita Kobol said Thursday, according to Bloomberg. 

The rollback marks a full reversal of legislation that took effect July 1, 2025, after parliament passed rules criminalizing the use of unlicensed exchanges and certain unauthorized high-value crypto transactions. 

Those transactions — ranging between 50 million Hungarian forints (roughly $162,000) and 500 million forints (roughly $1.62 million) — subjected individuals to prison terms of up to two or five years, depending on the transaction value.

Service providers operating without a central bank license faced sentences of up to eight years.

The rules required approved validation for both crypto-to-fiat and crypto-to-crypto conversions, a burden that led platforms including Revolut to suspend crypto services in Hungary and triggered an EU probe into whether the restrictions complied with bloc-wide regulations. 

Domestic trading volumes fell as local firms absorbed steep compliance costs.

Zoltán Tanács, Hungary’s Minister of Science and Technology, characterized the previous rules as “politically motivated” rather than market safeguards and announced the government’s intent to scrap the penalties. 

The new administration plans to abolish criminal prosecution for market participants, revise cybersecurity rules affecting approximately 4,000 Hungarian businesses subject to the NIS2 directive, and align national law with the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation.

Officials have identified Estonia as the template for rebuilding Hungary’s digital regulatory environment. Tanács said the reforms should draw international platforms back to Hungary and reduce friction for domestic operators, according to Bloomberg.

The shift carries significance beyond Hungary’s borders. The Orbán-era framework was one of the most restrictive in the European Union, and the EU’s inquiry had put Hungary at odds with the broader MiCA framework that governs crypto activity across the bloc. 

Alignment with MiCA would bring Hungary in line with the regulatory standard now binding all 27 member states.

Hungary’s pivot follows a wider trend of governments reconsidering punitive crypto policies. In April, Pakistan’s central bank lifted an eight-year ban on cryptocurrency operations, part of a broader move toward regulatory openness across emerging markets. 

The convergence of those shifts suggests that restrictive unilateral frameworks face mounting pressure as institutional adoption of digital assets accelerates globally and cross-border regulatory coordination deepens under frameworks like MiCA.

The Hungarian government has not yet set a timeline for when the legislative changes will take effect.

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