290,000 S Korean Public Sector Employees Forced to Declare Crypto Holdings
Tim Alper is a British journalist and features writer who has worked at Cryptonews.com since 2018. He has written for media outlets such as the BBC, the Guardian, and Chosun Ilbo. He has also worked...
- Naver-Dunamu Crypto ‘Mega-Company’ Could Be Worth $2.1B a Year – Experts
- Russia Losing ‘Millions of Dollars a Year to Illegal Crypto Miners’ – Report
- Russian Economist: BTC Will Hit $120k-$130k Again Before End of Year
- Russia’s Central Bank: Tokenization Will Let Foreigners Buy Domestic Shares
- S Korean Tax Agency: Pay Your Bills or We’ll Take Your Crypto Cold Wallets

Around 290,000 South Korean public sector workers will be forced to declare their crypto holdings starting from February.
Per Maeil Kyungjae, the Ministry of Personnel Management has declared that the rule will also apply to employees’ spouses and next of kin.
The development follows a recent ministry announcement that high-ranking public officials will be required to disclose their crypto holdings starting this year.
The decrees are a direct response to the ongoing Coin Gate political scandal.
The scandal centered around a leading lawmaker on a crypto-related parliamentarily committee who allegedly traded coins using insider information.
The ministry claimed it wants to highlight possible conflicts of interest and boost integrity in the public sector.
Other public officials, including lawmakers, were told they must make public crypto declarations last year.
Staff at financial regulators have also been told they must declare their coin holdings and refrain from trading crypto.
The media outlet reported that central and local government officials, as well as “civil servants ranked level four and above,” must report their crypto holdings.
South Korea’s civil service operates a nine-grade system, whereby grade nine (entry) is the lowest and grade one is the highest.
South Korea: Crypto Disclosures Mandatory from Next Month
The list includes high-ranking police, fire service, and customs officials.
Land registrars and tax officers will also need to report their crypto holdings.
Public sector workers must also disclose precious metals, stocks, cash, antiques, and real estate holdings.
However, while workers only need to declare such items if they exceed thresholds worth $4,000 to $8,000, this will not be the case for crypto. The media outlet wrote:
“All virtual assets held, regardless of amount or quantity, must be reported.”
🇰🇷 South Korean Exchange Searches for ‘Lost’ Owners of $206M Worth of Crypto
The South Korean crypto exchange Bithumb wants to find the “dormant” owners of $206 million worth of coins, including #Bitcoin, #Ethereum, and #XRP.#CryptoNewshttps://t.co/lfLfubkD6t
— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) January 1, 2024
The government will use the data it collects to create a publicly accessible, searchable database.
Citizens will be able to use this database to check on public sector workers’ crypto holdings.
Failure to make correct declarations could result in fines, dismissal, or disciplinary action, the ministry concluded.
- Mark Zuckerberg Meta AI Predicts Gold and Silver Price Will Skyrocket by End of 2026
- Elon Musk Grok AI Predicts XRP Will Explode by End of 2026
- Sam Altman ChatGPT AI Predicts Bitcoin Price Will Shock Everyone by End Of 2026
- Standard Chartered Holds $500K BTC Call as Trump Cites China Risk
- XRP Price Prediction: Can XRP Crack $1.20 Before Clarity Act?
About Us
2M+
250+
8
70
Market Overview
- 7d
- 1m
- 1y
- Mark Zuckerberg Meta AI Predicts Gold and Silver Price Will Skyrocket by End of 2026
- Elon Musk Grok AI Predicts XRP Will Explode by End of 2026
- Sam Altman ChatGPT AI Predicts Bitcoin Price Will Shock Everyone by End Of 2026
- Standard Chartered Holds $500K BTC Call as Trump Cites China Risk
- XRP Price Prediction: Can XRP Crack $1.20 Before Clarity Act?
More Articles
Get dialed in every Tuesday & Friday with quick updates on the world of crypto