Daily Breeze (Torrance)

El Salvador's bitcoin foray backfiring as value sinks

- By Anatoly Kurmanaev and Bryan Avelar

SAN SALVADOR, EL SLVADOR >> Bitcoin was meant to transform El Salvador's economy, catapultin­g the poor Central American nation into an unlikely harbinger of a financial revolution.

But nearly a year after the country's president, Nayib Bukele, shocked the financial world by making its most popular digital coin a national currency, his bet appears to be backfiring, highlighti­ng the gap between the utopian promises of cryptocurr­ency's proponents and economic realities.

The government's bitcoin holdings have lost about 60% of their presumed value during the recent market plunge. The use of bitcoin among Salvadoran­s has collapsed, and the country is running out of cash after Bukele failed to raise fresh funds from cryptocurr­ency investors.

Still, the financial setbacks have failed to dent Bukele's popularity. Polls show that more than 8 of 10 Salvadoran­s continue backing the president, thanks in part to his widely supported crackdown on criminal gangs and on fuel subsidies that have lessened the sting of global inflation.

But the failure of Bukele's stated objectives for bitcoin — to bring investment to the country and financial services to the poor — has exposed the shortcomin­gs of his authoritar­ian, image-focused style of governance, critics say. It has also raised questions about the financial sustainabi­lity of his ambitious plan to modernize El Salvador at the expense of democratic governance.

Last year, his government allocated the equivalent of 15% of its annual investment budget to try ingraining bitcoin into the national economy.

It offered $30 dollars, nearly 1% of what an average Salvadoran earns in a year, to every citizen who downloaded a government­backed cryptocurr­ency payment app called Chivo Wallet; chivo means “cool” in local slang.

Bukele claims that nearly 3 million Salvadoran­s, or 60% of adults, heeded his call.

Yet, after the initial uptake, the use of cryptocurr­ency has plunged.

Only 10% of Chivo users continued making bitcoin transactio­ns on the app after spending their $30 stipend, according to a survey conducted by three U.S.-based economists in February and published by the National Bureau of Economic Research. Almost no new customers downloaded the app this year, the researcher­s found.

“The government gave this project as much push as you could hope for, and it still failed,” said Fernando Alvarez, a University of Chicago economist and an author of the study.

A separate survey by El Salvador's Chamber of Commerce in March found that only 14% of the country's businesses made bitcoin transactio­ns since it was introduced in September, and only 3% said they perceived any business value in it.

Salvadoran­s in the United States have also ignored Bukele's call to use bitcoin to send money to relatives back home. Digital currency payment apps, such as Chivo, accounted for less than 2% of remittance­s in the first five months of this year, according to El Salvador's central bank.

Bukele's bitcoin push was dealt a further blow by a global cryptocurr­ency selloff that wiped away hundreds of billions of dollars from the value of digital assets since March.

“People are scared of losing their money,” said Edgardo Villalobos, who coordinate­s vendors at a sprawling street market in downtown San Salvador, El Salvador's capital. After the recent price collapse, he said his $30 stipend from downloadin­g the Chivo app is worth $10.

Still, despite the downturn, bitcoin enthusiast­s and entreprene­urs argue that the introducti­on of bitcoin has transforme­d El Salvador's image into that of a technologi­cal trailblaze­r and has created financial opportunit­ies for its citizens outside the mainstream banking systems.

“To the extent that we are pursuing financial freedom, we are still on track for that,” said Eric Gravengaar­d, CEO of Athena Bitcoin, a U.S.-based cryptocurr­ency company that operates El Salvador's network of cryptocurr­ency ATMs and processes bitcoin transactio­ns for the country's largest retail chains.

Critics say bitcoin has also failed to bring the promised wave of cryptocurr­ency entreprene­urs into the country.

Only 48 new companies focused on bitcoin have registered in El Salvador since the cryptocurr­ency's introducti­on, according to the country's central bank; that represents less than 2% of all businesses that opened in 2019. Almost all are startups that hire few locals and bring little investment, said Leanor Selva, executive director of El Salvador's National Associatio­n for Private Enterprise.

“In day-to-day, the impact has been null,” she said, adding that instead of attracting new investors, bitcoin has scared off traditiona­l financiers concerned by cryptocurr­ency's impact on economic stability.

Gravengaar­d retorted by pointing out that all but two of his company's 30 employees in El Salvador are local citizens. More broadly, the country's growing tech sector has given its youth an opportunit­y to build a career in a country that has long been one of the largest sources of migrants to the United States.

“This is simply a dream,” said Gerson Martinez, a Salvadoran bitcoin entreprene­ur. “As a son of migrants who had to leave El Salvador, this gives me a lot of hope.”

The price collapse has also not deterred Bukele's enthusiasm for bitcoin, which has earned him the adulation of the global cryptocurr­ency community.

In a series of Twitter posts over the past year, Bukele announced that he had bought a total of nearly 2,400 bitcoin tokens since September, in deals valued at an estimated $100 million. When critics accused him of financial irresponsi­bility, he responded by saying that he conducts transactio­ns on his phone while naked.

“Bitcoin is the future!” he said in a Twitter post June 30 after announcing his latest purchase amid an ongoing cryptocurr­ency selloff. “Thank you for selling cheap.”

It is unclear where the bitcoin assets are held, what they are worth, how they were paid for or even who holds the codes that prove their ownership.

Bukele's press office; his finance minister, Jose Alejandro Zelaya; and his bitcoin adviser, Samson Mow, did not respond to requests for comment.

So far, Bukele's trades have cost the country an estimated $63 million in lost value, according to estimates last week by the magazine Disruptive published by researcher­s at Francisco Gavidia University in San Salvador.

The losses are increasing as the government struggles to subsidize the rising costs of food and fuel imports and meet an upcoming debt payment.

Underlinin­g the funding challenges, Bukele last year slashed disburseme­nts for local government­s, forcing some mayors to reduce public services like scholarshi­ps and water infrastruc­ture.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An advertisem­ent for Bitcoin cryptocurr­ency is shown on a street in Hong Kong earlier this year.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An advertisem­ent for Bitcoin cryptocurr­ency is shown on a street in Hong Kong earlier this year.

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