This column is a critique of the recently tabled Virtual Assets and Virtual Asset Service Providers Bill 2025, which would have the effect of drastically curtailing the freedom of T&T nationals to invest in cryptocurrency and NFTs.
Cryptocurrency is a $4 trillion market that allows persons to take part in commerce and investment anywhere in the world without the delays associated with banking and wire transfers using the SWIFT system. Many people in T&T have made huge profits by investing in Bitcoin, Solana and Cardano.
Cryptocurrency represents an area of possible innovation and growth that could revolutionise our economy. Platforms like Ethereum & Tezos have whole ecosystems of software applications built on top of them, allowing smart contracts and other features that could revolutionise the future of business.
Smart adoption of cryptocurrency policy in T&T could help the forex crisis. Hotels and investors could take payments from foreigners in cryptocurrency and trade these for US dollars as they may need.
While the Virtual Assets Bill does allow licensed businesses to trade in virtual assets, the additional compliance costs of registration may be burdensome to small businesses and vendors. This represents a cost to entry that could deter innovation. The family-owned bed and breakfast service that is struggling to break even may have to gamble the time and money needed to register to be able to accept payments in virtual assets and choose not to take part.
In the last few days, I decided to join several crypto groups and have received phone calls from people who saw or heard about a TV discussion I had on the matter. Some people make a living by making profits on cryptocurrency exchanges and selling crypto to T&T citizens in exchange for TT dollars.
One individual I spoke to has family members who invested in local artists who tokenised their art on the blockchain.
The Virtual Assets Bill is vague enough to outlaw whatever profits artists and art collectors could make and would deter investments in T&T’s artistic and cultural sector.
One young investor who makes a living off of buying and selling virtual assets wrote a letter to the sitting Government, which I shall quote here. He asked to remain anonymous:
“The right to invest is no different from the right to speak. Take away the right to invest, and you are indirectly silencing people’s financial voice in this ever-evolving world of currencies and assets. If the people’s success for whoever attains it is a threat to the state, then the state becomes the greatest threat to the people.
Strategically imposing restrictions on the everyday person’s right to transact with digital assets simply keeps the population suppressed and forbidden from opportunity on a global level.
As of recently, the European Union and the United States of America are both accelerating in their widespread adoption of digital assets.
Digital assets are not a get-rich scheme; they are a diversity of projects that, when studied, invested in and accumulated over time, can serve to enhance a person’s financial life through patience and the Solomonic principle of “Time and Chance.”
A UK-based attorney at law and PhD Candidate in Blockchain law, Brian Sanya Mondoh, posted on LinkedIn that: “The Trinidad and Tobago Virtual Assets and Virtual Asset Service Providers Bill 2025 is a disappointing and terribly restrictive regulatory framework!”
In my opinion, innovation can’t be done!!! The Trinidad and Tobago Securities and Exchange Commission and the Central Bank of Trinidad and Tobago should really have done a better job with this.
Rather than imposing a blanket freeze, the authorities could have opted for a phased or pilot approach that balances risk management with encouraging responsible innovation to help the country develop a competitive digital finance sector.
With serious forex issues and all, my sweet T&T will keep losing business to “di other serious islands and dem!”
In summary, Mr Mondoh greatly disagrees with the Virtual Assets Bill in its present form.
While writing this column, the news broke that Vicky Boodram was discharged of over 100 fraud charges after nine years in court. This failure to prosecute Boodram shows how broken the criminal justice system is.
The Virtual Assets Bill, in its present state, would be prohibitively expensive to enforce and become a burden on the TTPS and DPP to prosecute.
My suggestion would be to limit the applicability of the Virtual Assets Bill to a minimum of around $50,000 per annum, an amount that can allow small businesses and investors to experiment with virtual assets but not so large as to facilitate money laundering and terrorist financing.
The bill should be fine-tuned to target only suspicious transactions that could be linked back to organised crime. In its present form, the Virtual Assets Bill has the potential to set T&T’s economic development back by 15 years, and I urge the Parliament to significantly amend the provisions of this bill before it is passed as law.