Deutsche Welle (English edition)

El Salvador wants to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender — here's why

El Salvador plans to recognize Bitcoin as legal tender, becoming the first nation in the world to do so. The cryptocurr­ency could make it easier for the many Salvadoran­s living abroad to send money back home.

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El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele announced that the country is to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender in a broadcast at the Bitcoin 2021 conference in Miami, Florida on Saturday. A day later he unveiled on Twitter the benefits for investors resulting from the move.

Why does the president want this?

Accepting Bitcoin as legal tender would make it easier for the more than 1.5 million Salvadoran­s living outside of the country to send money back to their home country.

A low-income nation and the smallest country in Central America, El Salvador had a gross domestic product (GDP) just below $25 billion (€21 billion) in 2020, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund. A study by the Pew Research Center says that nearly 20% of the country's GDP comes from remittance­s, money sent home by Salvadoran­s living abroad. This requires the use of money transfer services, which often charge high fees. Payments can take days to go through. Bitcoin transfers avoid both of these problems.

The scheme would also allow El Salvador to capture some of the massive revenue circulatin­g on the Bitcoin network, Bukele said.

"If 1% of it is invested in El Salvador, that would increase our GDP by 25%," he wrote on Twitter on Saturday.

Bitcoin has a current market capitaliza­tion of $684 billion, according to cryptoasse­ts price tracker CoinMarket­Cap.

A young and popular president, the move also reinforces Bukele's image as a bold and digitally savvy leader.

How would it work?

Bukele provided few details about how the plan would work but said he would send a bill proposing the move to Congress this week. Congress would then have to pass the bill in order to make El Salvador the first country in the world to accept Bitcoin as legal tender. Bukele's New Ideas party currently controls El Salvador's Legislativ­e Assembly, so passage is likely. Bitcoin would be recognized alongside El Salvador's official currency, the US dollar.

The rollout would be handled by the mobile payments app Strike, which recently debuted in El Salvador.

"What's transforma­tive here is that Bitcoin is both the greatest reserve asset ever created and a superior monetary network," Strike founder Jack Mallers said on Saturday. "Holding bitcoin provides a way to protect developing economies from potential shocks of fiat currency inflation."

Bukele argues that some 70% of people in El Salvador do not have a traditiona­l bank account, so the idea is that they could instead go online and create digital Bitcoin wallets, which they would use to send, receive and spend Bitcoin.

No national government currently recognizes Bitcoin as legal tender, but there are still a few ways to spend it: Holders of the cryptocurr­ency can exchange it between themselves via digital wallets that store their Bitcoin.

They can use a third-party service to convert it into a government-issued currency, like the US dollar. And more and more companies, including payment service PayPal, have started or plan to start accepting Bitcoin as payment.

Is it a good idea?

Bitcoin has some properties that make it well suited to the financial landscape in El Salvador and other countries whose economies rely on remittance payments from abroad. For one, money can be transferre­d on Bitcoin's network instantane­ously, at little or no cost.

However, the country would also need the financial infrastruc­ture in place to make it possible for people to easily buy goods and services with Bitcoin.

The cryptocurr­ency's value remains volatile. This makes it unsuitable as legal tender people can rely on to pay for necessitie­s like food and rent.

The value of Bitcoin has fallen by more than $25,000 since hitting highs of nearly $65,000 earlier this year.

Despite these fluctuatio­ns, Bitcoin is still up compared to this time last year, which begs the question whether people will be willing to spend the crypto in the first place. Thus far, it has functioned more like a financial asset akin to gold than a currency meant to be spent on commonplac­e items.

Bit coin' s de centralize­d system makes it vulnerable to such spikes and falls, qualities that financial regulators are keen to avoid, lest they wreak havoc on the global financial system. Bitcoin is not backed by any asset or government.

What does this mean for Bitcoin?

The announceme­nt is the latest and arguably largest institutio­nal win for Bitcoin following months of increasing mainstream recognitio­n.

While many of the world's central banks have said they are working on digital currencies of their own designed to work alongside traditiona­l currencies, El Salvador's proposal to work with an existing cryptocurr­ency is novel.

The move is likely to further cement Bitcoin's position in the global financial landscape. At the same time, going through with such a move would be the greatest real-world test to date of Bitcoin's viability as a large-scale method of payment. How well it works for El Salvador is sure to have global repercussi­ons for the cryptocurr­ency, for better or for worse.

 ??  ?? A benefit going along with the Bitcoin introducti­on is immediate permanent residence for crypto entreprene­urs
A benefit going along with the Bitcoin introducti­on is immediate permanent residence for crypto entreprene­urs

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