The current State Property Act, a relic from 1950, restricts state assets to physical real estate, leaving no room for the complexities of the digital economy. By replacing this with a comprehensive framework, officials aim to establish specialized development standards for intangible assets. This transition marks a departure from traditional preservation models, prioritizing instead the extraction of economic value from government-owned digital resources.
This legislative shift complements a broader economic roadmap for 2026 that cements blockchain infrastructure as a pillar of national growth. While artificial intelligence commands a larger share of current funding, the ministry remains committed to finalizing the Digital Asset Basic Act. This pending legislation will define business conduct standards and create a legal pathway for won-pegged stablecoins and spot cryptocurrency exchange-traded funds.
Practical implementation is already moving beyond the drafting phase. A pilot program linking tokenized government bonds with a central bank digital currency is slated for 2027. Simultaneously, Gyeonggi Province is preparing an eight-month trial starting in August. Led by security firm ZKrypto, this experiment will utilize zero-knowledge proofs to test stablecoin circulation and fraud prevention, providing a real-world stress test for the country’s evolving digital asset strategy.

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