The National - News

Cryptocurr­encies can drive financial inclusion

- ALKESH SHARMA

Cryptocurr­encies can help developing economies bridge the digital divide and boost financial inclusion, billionair­e blockchain technology pioneer Brock Pierce said.

Citing El Salvador, which became the first economy to adopt Bitcoin as a legal tender last month, Mr Pierce said more than half of the Central American nation’s population downloaded the Bitcoin Wallet in a month.

“Results are unbelievab­le,” Mr Pierce told a panel at a future-of-finance event hosted by the Middle East Futures forum. “They managed to achieve what was my highest expectatio­n. The data shows the courageous move has worked the latest technologi­es or innovation­s can address the global problem population of those without acccess to banking.

“The level of interest in digital currencies in the developing world is unbelievab­le. How can you expect prosperity if you don’t have the essential financial tools? El Salvador has proved that this idea works to create financial inclusion.”

Globally, about 1.7 billion adults remain with no account at a financial institutio­n or through a mobile money provider, a World Bank report released in 2017 showed.

Nearly half of them live in seven developing economies – Bangladesh, China, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Nigeria and Pakistan – and almost 56 per cent of all unbanked adults are women.

However, financial access rates have increased since 2011, when the World Bank began documentin­g them through the Global Findex database.

The share of adults who have a bank account rose globally from 51 per cent in 2011 to 69 per cent in 2017 – an additional 515 million people, World Bank data show.

The Salvadoran government offered citizens $30 worth of free Bitcoin if they downloaded the crypto wallet.

Mr Pierce said El Salvador’s move could face some initial hurdles including technologi­cal glitches, protests and less funding from agencies the World Bank and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

But it will attract new foreign direct investment worth billions of dollars to El Salvador, where more than 70 per cent of people lack bank access, he said. “El Salvador does not get much money from the World Bank and IMF as compared to the other countries. I think they were expecting $1.3 billion this year in the form of debt.

“But their recent action is astounding, very entreprene­urial, and it will attract FDIs that will create sustainabl­e streams of revenue in the longer run.”

Mr Pierce, who ran as an independen­t candidate for the US presidency last year, is chairman of the Bitcoin Foundation and co-founder of EOS Alliance, Block.one, Blockchain Capital, Tether and Mastercoin, and is credited with establishi­ng marketplac­es for digital currency.

“This [blockchain and digital currency] technology works in an environmen­t where most people don’t have access to their capital,” Ali El Husseini, chief executive of Medici Land Governance, told the panel.

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