Source: Coindoo
Original Title: Poland’s Crypto Economy Expands Faster Than Its Lawmakers Can Regulate
Original Link: https://coindoo.com/polands-crypto-economy-expands-faster-than-its-lawmakers-can-regulate/
Poland’s digital-asset industry is expanding rapidly — but its legal foundation just collapsed again.
Lawmakers were unable to gather enough votes this week to overturn President Karol Nawrocki’s veto of the Crypto-Asset Market Act, leaving the country without a regulatory roadmap even as adoption races ahead.
A Growing Economy Without Guardrails
Recent data from Chainalysis paints a striking picture: Poland is now one of Europe’s largest crypto ecosystems, with transaction activity jumping more than 50% year-on-year.
It also ranks eighth in Europe for total on-chain value received, and a wave of Bitcoin ATMs has made it the fifth-largest BTC ATM hub in the world — bigger than El Salvador, despite that country’s Bitcoin-as-legal-tender status.
The irony isn’t lost on observers: Polish citizens are embracing crypto faster than regulators can decide how to govern it.
Politics Stops What MiCA Was Supposed to Start
The rejected legislation was meant to plug Poland into the EU’s MiCA regulatory architecture, offering a unified framework for exchanges, asset issuers and service providers.
Instead of ratification, the bill was blocked — and Nawrocki justified his veto by claiming the proposal threatened civil liberty, financial security and state stability.
With parliament unable to override him, the entire legislative process must restart from scratch.
Industry Split Over Whether the Bill Would Help or Harm
The proposal didn’t fall along simple “pro-crypto vs. anti-crypto” lines.
Yet several domestic industry voices feared the opposite problem: over-regulation, high compliance burdens and even personal legal exposure for executives, which they warned would drive capital and startups elsewhere.
The Veto Leaves Everyone Waiting
Instead of a compromise, Poland now has neither stricter oversight nor the aligned framework Brussels is moving toward.
For companies, that means continued uncertainty. For policymakers, it means rewriting — and possibly re-fighting — the bill from the ground up.
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LiquidationAlert
· 27m ago
Regulation can't keep up with development; this is the same everywhere in the world. Poland hasn't escaped it either.
View OriginalReply0
gas_fee_therapist
· 16h ago
Regulation can never keep up with the market; this is the same everywhere in the world. This time, Poland has been dragged into it—a typical case of policy lag.
View OriginalReply0
WagmiOrRekt
· 16h ago
This kind of "the law can't keep up with development" scenario is really playing out in the crypto scene of every country.
View OriginalReply0
ShitcoinArbitrageur
· 17h ago
When regulation can't keep up, that's when the daredevils have the most fun.
Poland's Crypto Economy Expands Faster Than Its Lawmakers Can Regulate
Source: Coindoo Original Title: Poland’s Crypto Economy Expands Faster Than Its Lawmakers Can Regulate Original Link: https://coindoo.com/polands-crypto-economy-expands-faster-than-its-lawmakers-can-regulate/ Poland’s digital-asset industry is expanding rapidly — but its legal foundation just collapsed again.
Lawmakers were unable to gather enough votes this week to overturn President Karol Nawrocki’s veto of the Crypto-Asset Market Act, leaving the country without a regulatory roadmap even as adoption races ahead.
A Growing Economy Without Guardrails
Recent data from Chainalysis paints a striking picture: Poland is now one of Europe’s largest crypto ecosystems, with transaction activity jumping more than 50% year-on-year.
It also ranks eighth in Europe for total on-chain value received, and a wave of Bitcoin ATMs has made it the fifth-largest BTC ATM hub in the world — bigger than El Salvador, despite that country’s Bitcoin-as-legal-tender status.
The irony isn’t lost on observers: Polish citizens are embracing crypto faster than regulators can decide how to govern it.
Politics Stops What MiCA Was Supposed to Start
The rejected legislation was meant to plug Poland into the EU’s MiCA regulatory architecture, offering a unified framework for exchanges, asset issuers and service providers.
Instead of ratification, the bill was blocked — and Nawrocki justified his veto by claiming the proposal threatened civil liberty, financial security and state stability.
With parliament unable to override him, the entire legislative process must restart from scratch.
Industry Split Over Whether the Bill Would Help or Harm
The proposal didn’t fall along simple “pro-crypto vs. anti-crypto” lines.
Security-minded lawmakers supported it, saying Poland risks foreign exploitation without stronger oversight.
Yet several domestic industry voices feared the opposite problem: over-regulation, high compliance burdens and even personal legal exposure for executives, which they warned would drive capital and startups elsewhere.
The Veto Leaves Everyone Waiting
Instead of a compromise, Poland now has neither stricter oversight nor the aligned framework Brussels is moving toward.
For companies, that means continued uncertainty. For policymakers, it means rewriting — and possibly re-fighting — the bill from the ground up.