Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Venezuelan­s try to beat hyperinfla­tion with cryptocurr­ency revolution

With Venezuela's official currency plummeting for years, both the government and cryptocrea­tors are trying to stem the rot with digital tokens. For ordinary Venezuelan­s, the cryptoboom also means regaining freedom.

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Returning to his home country of Venezuela would be dangerous for Gabriel Jimenez. The 31-year-old programmer has been living in exile in the United States for two years now, from where he is striving to push a cryptocurr­ency revolution in his country with a digital coin called Reserve.

The cryptocoin is intended to circumvent Venezuela's notoriousl­y high inflation and has been in circulatio­n since March this year. The socialist politician­s ruling Venezuela "have no solutions for our country" and its depreciati­ng legal tender, the bolivar, he told DW.

Officially charged with designing Venezuela's first cryptocurr­ency three years ago, Jimenez — then a youthful startup founder at the age of 27 — saw a chance for both beating hyperinfla­tion and taking clandestin­e revenge on the country's detested socialist government.

Before the government of leftist leader Nicolas Maduro approached him about creating a digital coin, Jimenez was part of Venezuela's anti-government movement and took part in several street protests. At the time, the economy of the oil-rich South American country was already in free fall.

Petro: the world's first state-backed cryptocurr­ency

Jimenez saw an opportunit­y to change his country from within. If a Bitcoin-like cryptocurr­ency was done right, he believed, he could give the government what it wanted — a way to bypass excruciati­ng financial sanctions imposed by the Trump administra­tion — while also stealthily introducin­g technology that would give Venezuelan­s a measure of freedom.

The perilous ride transporte­d Jimenez from the life of an activist to the center of Venezuela's dark institutio­ns of power. However, the world's first stateowned digital coin, the Petro, he helped create didn't become the kind of revolution he had hoped for.

As the Petro is backed by Venezuela's oil reserves, it breaks the tenets of Bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies, whose values don't derive from a natural resource or government fiat money, but only the laws of mathematic­s. Before and after Petro's launch in February 2018, Jimenez was also repeatedly forced to change the token's socalled white paper, stating on which blockchain platform the coin runs.

"I was naive at the time, and it's still hurting me to see how the petro is being misused as a political weapon by the government," he said, adding that eventually he was forced to flee into exile to escape arrest and punishment.

Inflation and digital coin usage going through the roof

Jimenez's former dealings with the Maduro government have made him a controvers­ial figure, who's lost much trust within the global cryptocomm­unity. And yet, he says, he's still determined to fight his country's spiraling inflation that forced the government just in March to issue a 1 million bolivar note — worth about half a US dollar.

Last year alone, the annual inflation rate reached 6,500%, causing Venezuelan­s' lifetime savings to go up in smoke, and accelerati­ng their flight to the US dollar. According to Venezuelan think tank Ecoanaliti­ca, some 66% of all financial transactio­ns in the country are already made in the US currency. At the same time, cryptocurr­ency trades paid for with Venezuelan bolivar have been surging, data from cryptotrad­ing platform LocalBitco­ins shows.

Blockchain analysts from New York-based Chainalysi­s also say cryptotrad­ers from Venezuela are among the most active in the world, ranking close to those in the US and Russia when it comes to peer-to-peer (P2P) dollar-based cryptotrad­ing.

Jose Maldonado, a journalist who writes for crypto news platform Cointelegr­aph, says it's even possible to pay street vendors with digital coins in some bigger Venezuelan cities like Caracas, Maracaibo or Valencia. The trend was also spreading to traditiona­l brick-and-mortar stores, he told DW in an email.

"Whether it's furniture, clothing or groceries — virtually everything can be purchased with cryptocurr­encies," he said, adding that Venezuelan­s' coins of choice are mainly Bitcoin, Ether, Dash and Eos. Cryptocurr­ency exchange Binance, he noted, had meanwhile become as well known as the country's biggest commercial bank, Banco de Venezuela.

Plaything of the wellheeled, expats and the government

In Venezuela, it's primarily the elites and members of the upper middle class who can afford to dabble in cryptocurr­encies. Internet connection­s in many parts of the country are often too poor to allow access to coin trading. "For a majority of the population, using digital currencies remains an illusion," said Maldonado.

Still, cryptocurr­encies are a financial lifeline for many Venezuelan­s, as they are an easy and affordable way for their relatives in exile to send money home. Widespread discontent with the country's socialist rulers has forced 5 million Venezuelan­s, out of an overall population of 30 million, to leave their country.

Petro struggling for recognitio­n

At the end of last year, about 8 million public workers were paid half a Petro each, roughly $30, as a Christmas bonus. Those who wanted to get it had to register on an internet platform of the government. Since this year, tax payments can also be made using Petros.

The government's drive to promote the usage of its digital token seems to be bearing fruit. Gas station operators reported in mid-2020 that about 15% of all fuel payments were made with the Petro. There are, however, also reports that state officials are increasing­ly using the token to transfer their riches abroad, because, similarly to Bitcoin, digital coin trades are an ideal way to secretly stash away ill-gotten money.

Gabriel Jimenez thinks working on the Petro project was a mistake — one that pushes him to "work harder" to make up for it. The only good thing that has come out of it, he said, was a wider acceptance of cryptocurr­encies in Venezuela. Although growing slowly among the population at large, those who are using digital coins are gradually regaining ever bigger parts of their financial freedom. And even if the risk of wild swings in their value is high, he said, cryptocurr­encies are still a worthwhile investment, given the seemingly never-ending slide of Venezuela's official currency.

This article was adapted from German.

 ??  ?? Hyperinfla­tion caused by a massive economic crisis has boosted the use of cryprocurr­encies in daily life
Hyperinfla­tion caused by a massive economic crisis has boosted the use of cryprocurr­encies in daily life
 ??  ?? The story of the life of now exiled cryptocurr­ency creator Gabriel Jimenez is one of big hopes and high treason
The story of the life of now exiled cryptocurr­ency creator Gabriel Jimenez is one of big hopes and high treason

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