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U.S. Treasury Leans Into Blockchain: Payments & Decentralized Computing Get a Federal Boost

U.S. Treasury Leans Into Blockchain: Payments & Decentralized Computing Get a Federal Boost

Published:
2025-08-01 17:09:21
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U.S. Treasury is exploring blockchain for payments and decentralized computing

The U.S. Treasury just dropped a bombshell—blockchain isn’t just for crypto anarchists anymore. Federal adoption is accelerating, and Wall Street’s legacy systems are sweating bullets.

### From Bureaucracy to Blockchain

No more dusty ledgers or sluggish settlements. The Treasury’s exploration of decentralized tech could rewrite how money moves—cutting out middlemen, slashing costs, and (gasp) actually modernizing government finance. Take that, 1970s-era banking rails.

### Decentralized Computing: The Silent Disruptor

Beyond payments, the real play might be decentralized compute. Imagine a world where Uncle Sam’s data centers get outsourced to a global network of nodes. Efficiency meets transparency—or at least that’s the pitch before the lobbyists descend.

### The Irony Isn’t Lost

Funny how the same institution that polices crypto now wants its perks. Maybe next they’ll mint a CBDC and finally admit Bitcoin was the blueprint all along. Until then? Watch the suits try to out-innovate the very rebels they once regulated.

Scott attacks Biden-era policies and defends Trump’s crypto push

In an op-ed published Thursday in the Washington Post, Scott said innovation “requires balanced, forward-looking regulation.” He claimed that Trump’s actions since returning to office have helped rebuild trust in the crypto industry, which he said was “suffocated” under the Biden administration.

Scott accused President Joe Biden of using regulators to block banks from touching crypto. He also said the former White House tried to “limit or eliminate” Bitcoin mining entirely and allowed former SEC Chair Gary Gensler to target crypto startups with aggressive legal threats.

But since Trump returned, Scott said the message has been different. “We stood at an inflection point in November, and Trump’s victory was a clear message to the world that Americans rejected managed decline and the suppression of innovation,” he wrote.

Scott said that, during his first week in office, Trump told agencies to remove the anti-crypto guidance written by the Biden administration. He also directed them to stop enforcement actions that punished companies just for being in the crypto space.

Scott pointed to the new law signed by Trump—the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act, also called the GENIUS Act—as the framework for stablecoin regulation. The law gives dollar-backed stablecoins an official status in the U.S. economy. Scott argued this WOULD turn the U.S. dollar into a digital payment tool that’s “fast, frictionless, and cost-efficient.”

He claimed this would attract global users to the dollar, boost demand for U.S. Treasury bills, reduce borrowing costs, and help keep the dollar as the world’s top currency.

He also brought up the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025, which recently passed the House of Representatives. The bill would define which agency—either the SEC or CFTC—regulates specific crypto activities. It uses models from traditional finance to assign responsibilities and would help end years of uncertainty.

Scott warned that if the Senate doesn’t act on the bill, the president’s larger plans can’t be completed. He said the industry needs a proper legal structure to grow inside the country. The former Wall Street star said:

“November 4, 2024, was America’s Hard Fork on digital assets. Since taking office, President Trump has righted the wrongs of his predecessor by fashioning the United States into a crypto superpower.”

As part of this effort, Trump picked David Sacks—a longtime tech founder—as the new AI and Crypto Czar. He also removed top regulators who had blocked crypto innovation and replaced them with people who support the space.

Scott confirmed that several high-profile cases brought by the old SEC have now been dropped. These included lawsuits that had put crypto exchanges and protocols under legal pressure for years.

Scott ended his op-ed by saying, “Regulatory certainty is essential to cementing our status as the crypto capital of the world. Just as essential is executing on the recommendations from today’s report on crypto regulation.”

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