According to Deep Tide TechFlow news, on December 21, MicroStrategy CEO Michael Saylor released a proposal (U.S. Digital Asset Framework, Principles, and Opportunities). The framework revolves around five core parts, aimed at strengthening the dollar's position, neutralizing national debt, and establishing the U.S. as a global leader in the digital economy of the 21st century.

The framework first proposes a classification system for digital assets, dividing them into six categories: non-issuer digital commodities supported by computing power (such as Bitcoin), issuer digital securities, digital currencies, digital utility tokens, digital NFTs, and asset-backed tokens (such as tokens backed by gold and oil).

On a practical level, Saylor suggests limiting the compliance costs of asset issuance to within 1% of the managed asset size, with annual maintenance costs not exceeding 0.1%. He also proposes lowering issuance costs (from tens of millions to hundreds of thousands of dollars), expanding the capital market access threshold from the current 4,000 listed companies to 40 million enterprises.

In terms of development prospects, Saylor expects the digital currency market to expand from $25 billion to $10 trillion, the global digital capital market to grow from $2 trillion to $280 trillion, and the digital asset market (excluding Bitcoin) to potentially grow from $1 trillion to $590 trillion. He specifically recommends establishing a Bitcoin reserve, believing this could create $16-81 trillion in wealth for the U.S. Treasury and provide a new avenue to offset national debt.