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Paola Subacchi questions the wisdom of El Salvador's recent decision to adopt the cryptocurrency Bitcoin as legal tender

Currencies
Paola Subacchi questions the wisdom of El Salvador's recent decision to adopt the cryptocurrency Bitcoin as legal tender

Many regard the market for Bitcoin – the world’s leading cryptocurrency – as a game of winners and losers played out among hedge funds, amateur investors, geeks, and criminals. The huge risk inherent in a highly volatile anonymous digital currency is best left to those who understand the game well, or who don’t really care because they can mitigate the risk or absorb any losses. But Bitcoin recently has become more attractive for countries and individuals with limited access to conventional payment systems – that is, those least equipped to manage the underlying risk.

Earlier this month, El Salvador became the first country to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender, enacting legislation that will take effect in September. This means that Bitcoin can be used to pay for goods and services throughout the country, and recipients are legally obliged to accept it.

Salvadorans are not new to this type of monetary experiment. The US dollar became legal tender in El Salvador in 2001 and is the currency used in domestic transactions. At that time, the government of President Francisco Flores allowed the dollar to circulate freely alongside the national currency, the colón, at a fixed exchange rate.

Dollar advocates argued that the expected benefits of macroeconomic stability would outweigh El Salvador’s loss of economic sovereignty, monetary independence, and even seigniorage – the difference between the cost of producing coins and banknotes and their face value. But purchasing power suddenly plummeted and left the economy even more dependent on remittances, which have averaged about 20% of GDP per year over the past two decades.

Using Bitcoin as legal tender will exacerbate the monetary constraints that dollarization revealed – notably, the lack of an independent macroeconomic-institutional framework around which to shape domestic policies. Moreover, Bitcoin is much more volatile than the dollar. Between June 8-15, its value swung between $32,462 and $40,993, and in the period from May 15 to June 15, it ranged from $34,259 to $49,304. Such wide fluctuations – and the fact that they are entirely market-driven, with no scope for policymakers to manage the swings – make Bitcoin an unsuitable instrument for macroeconomic stabilisation.

El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, tweeted that Bitcoin will facilitate remittance transfers and considerably reduce transaction costs. The fees that migrants must pay to send their money home are scandalously high, despite many calls by the United Nations and the G20 to reduce them. According to the World Bank, the average global cost of sending $200 internationally is approximately $13, or 6.5%, well above the Sustainable Development Goal target of 3%.

Nonetheless, in 2020, low- and middle-income countries received remittances of $540 billion – only slightly less than the 2019 total of $548 billion, and much larger than these countries’ inflows of foreign direct investment ($259 billion in 2020) and overseas development assistance ($179 billion in 2020). Reducing the fees to 2% could increase remittances by as much as $16 billion per year.

The large but globally fragmented remittance business relies on electronic transfers via commercial banks’ payment systems, and banks charge hefty fees for the use of this infrastructure and the benefit of a safe and reliable international network. But high fees are not the only issue. Many migrants don’t have a bank account in the country where they work, and their families back home may also be among the 1.7 billion unbanked people worldwide. Furthermore, some migrants may need to transfer money to countries that either are not integrated into the international payment system or are restricted in their ability to receive cross-border transfers – for example, Syria or Cuba.

Bukele is right about the need to challenge this system, including by providing low-cost and low-risk alternatives. But Bitcoin is the wrong tool. Yes, it allows people to transfer value directly and globally, without the costly third-party intermediation. But its volatility makes it at best an asset – and an extremely risky store of value – rather than a means of exchange. The risk of a sudden drop in its price means that migrants and their families back home can never be sure about the amount transferred.

Rather than dismiss El Salvador’s Bitcoin adoption as just another example of the crypto craze, we should reflect on why many people around the world are willing to embrace cryptocurrencies for non-speculative purposes. Perhaps the answer lies in the fact that the current international financial system serves them either poorly or not at all.

Innovations in digital money, such as the M-Pesa mobile money service in Africa, have made significant inroads into many developing countries’ payment systems. But more needs to be done to provide the infrastructure and regulatory frameworks to support digital money. For now, the terrain remains patchy.

Coordinated cross-border policies are urgently needed to ensure that Bitcoin and its variants don’t do more harm than good in developing countries. Unless both the public and private sectors embrace critical reforms and make basic banking services available to all at low costs, people and governments will increasingly be attracted by Bitcoin and other low-cost, high-risk, and murky alternatives to traditional banking.


Paola Subacchi, Professor of International Economics at the University of London’s Queen Mary Global Policy Institute, is the author, most recently, of The Cost of Free Money. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2021, and published here with permission.

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41 Comments

Do you understand how Strike works? They are partnering with local banks so that people can go USD - USD using the bitcoin lightning network so they won't be exposed to volatility.... Please do your research before writing such articles. I'll put a podcast below

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https://open.spotify.com/episode/5rOlQMIj3D6DW6E6FeCtNx?si=T7s9EFKfSPew…

Jack Mallers of strike saying what's actually happening. Unlike article above.

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Great podcast. Strike really is a revolutionary advancement. It's also worth listening to the follow up episodes.
Interview with President Nayibe Bukele himself, on why they adopted bitcoin as legal tender. https://www.whatbitcoindid.com/podcast/why-el-salvador-made-bitcoin-leg…
And interview with economist Lyn Alden on the macro economic outlook for El Salvador. https://www.whatbitcoindid.com/podcast/el-salvador-macro-outlook

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Most news isn't about facts anymore, but atrophying the spirit with an endless stream of despair, hopelessness and fear.

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Please do your research before writing such articles.

Name dropping Strike does not refute anything the author has written.

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Listen to the podcast in the link. Explains.

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Listen to the podcast in the link. Explains.

I don't need an education on Strike. I know what it is and quite possibly more in-depth than you. I'm challenging your ultra orthodox mindset. Strike is a technology that may not work in the 'real world' as your evangelism suggests.

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Podcast was for the author - not yourself. Cheers.

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Do you think she's reading these comments?

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Why not? She might learn something

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Strike enables them the choice to convert instantaneously into USD or stay in BTC. They never had a choice before this, so many have no investment option or access savings account at all. Not holding their money in BTC won’t make any difference as you can convert instantly either way and for free. Many will stay with USD for now, but confidence will grow, esp when BTC pumps again. She seems to gloss over this aspect.

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I beg to differ. Her whole premise is that Bitcoin is too volatile to hold and use as a currency (not wrong) ergo the country shouldn't use it for remittances.
But the fact that they can use it as a payment rails and go straight back to USD totally undermines the entire point of the article.
By converting straight back to USD you get all of the benefits with none of the downside.

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Bitcoin is the most open decentralised & secure monetary network with a hard cap supply. The rest is either an cryptoasset or noise.

The rate of technological innovation on top of the unchanging bitcoin base-layer is exponential. Adoption is similar to early internet.

Money needs to and is being separated from state. Anyone who disagrees that this is necessary doesn't understand our current financial system.

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Blanket, close-ended statements like the above is one of the problems with how the crypto fan boys communicate across social media, particularly in the past 12 months. We can lay some of the blame on celebrities like Michael Saylor for promoting such grandiosity. It doesn't mean that the statements are necessarily wrong nor does it mean that they are correct either. But it's a sign of the 'ultra orthodox' elements of those who have found religion. But what it does suggest is a lack of critical thinking and scientific thought process. The following was tweeted by a popular financial investment strategist who has invested in Bitcoin:

It's a good idea to follow some people you disagree with. Otherwise you risk ending up in an echo chamber.

Resist the temptation to tribalize and segment yourself, and instead focus on building connections and strength-testing your ideas.

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You mean Lynn Alden tweet this AM? Lol I totally agree w her thoughts re echo chamber.

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I listen to as many of her podcasts / newsletters as I can. And try to do this across a wide range of different opinions including critics of crypto e.g. Mike Green, Schiff, Dalio (though recently brought btc).

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You mean Lynn Alden tweet this AM? Lol I totally agree w her thoughts re echo chamber.

Well practice what she says. Don't just pay lip service. What she said is a basic premise of the philosophy of science.

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Doge to the moon

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What a load of waffle.

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What a load of waffle.

Challenge your own evangelism. Sorry buddy but the unlocking of the secrets to the universe are not found on Twitter.

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I’m good thanks. You on the other hand may need a break from the keyboard? You’re at risk of sounding unhinged like Taleb has become.

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There we go. You place your own evangelism with a cursory dismissal of the arguments of a great thinker like Nassim Taleb. You don't see any issues with this?

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Nothing to do with evangelism. I have my own successful medical practice, so Bitcoin is a small side interest for me. I am fascinated by the technology and the possibility of providing a savings/investment vehicle for many of the World’s unbanked. I think it’s exciting as we’ve never had this type of technology on our mobile phones before, and in the context of currency collapse in many countries, there does seem to be an exciting future. Does this make me a cultist, as I’ve been labelled before? I think not.
By the way, I usually enjoy your very informed views and comments, but you seem to come across as a bit arrogant of late especially with BTC. Maybe just peg it back a bit, and be constructive in your debate rather than labelling and denigrating others who may not know as much as you. Or not. Just my humble opinion.

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By the way, I usually enjoy your very informed views and comments, but you seem to come across as a bit arrogant of late especially with BTC. Maybe just peg it back a bit, and be constructive in your debate rather than labelling and denigrating others who may not know as much as you.

On the contrary. The 'evangelism' comes from all the hyperbole on social media. That is not humility at all and far from Socratic thought. It's soapboxing and mimicking the BTC celebrities. And this is likely bugging people like Nassim Taleb whose work is steeped in philosophy and knowledge theory.

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JC you have not detailed why you think Strike will not work....just spouted off you know more than the rest of us?

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JC you have not detailed why you think Strike will not work....just spouted off you know more than the rest of us?

There you go. Where did I say anything about Strike "not working"? OTOH, there is no evidence of Strike being some kind of economic savior of El Salvador or any other country for that matter. As for "spouting off", on the contrary. I am open minded enough to challenge the evangelicals.

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Strike's remittance trial in El Salvador paves the way for the future of remittance payments, effectively driving the cost of sending cross-border payments to zero.

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I read Talebs recent paper - great thinker yes but thinks bitcoin payments still take 10 mins I.e. doesn't acknowledge functioning/rapidly developing lightning network. Hmmm...

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I read Talebs recent paper - great thinker yes but thinks bitcoin payments still take 10 mins I.e. doesn't acknowledge functioning/rapidly developing lightning network. Hmmm...

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A new phenomenon known as C² is coming- crypto capitulation.

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When shall we ready ourselves for this coming? 1 -2 ..10 years?

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Lol Taleb has lost it, if you want some actually educated rebuttals to his "Bitcoin is worth 0" conclusion try some of these:
https://twitter.com/nic__carter/status/1408172616494596105?s=20

Cant read the second one, but it sure sounds like it will be an unbias gem..../s

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Hopefully this helps build out micro-Bitcoin payment networks including Lightning and BOLT standards.

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Fancy that, a non executive director of Blackrock who stand to be disintermediated by crypto trying to badmouth bitcoin. More shill journalism. Predicable. Boring. Nothing to see here. 2 minutes of research required to find this out.

https://uk.linkedin.com/in/paola-subacchi-b5554621

BlackRock, Inc. is an American multinational investment management corporation based in New York City. Founded in 1988, initially as a risk management and fixed income institutional asset manager, BlackRock is the world's largest asset manager, with over $8 trillion in assets under management as of January 2021.

Ultimately this is positive news. Blackrock are pooing in their undies.

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Now here's some hypocritical platitudes from organisations who flat out refused to assist El Salvador directly solve the problem of banking the 70% of their population who are unbanked:

IMF mission statement: The IMF's fundamental mission is to help ensure stability in the international system. It does so in three ways: keeping track of the global economy and the economies of member countries; lending to countries with balance of payments difficulties; and giving practical help to members.

World bank mission statement: to achieve the twin goals of ending extreme poverty and building shared prosperity.

Blackrock: Coordinated cross-border policies [centralised control] are urgently needed to ensure that Bitcoin and its variants don’t do more harm than good [disrupt the banking elite] in developing countries.

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Before running off on your own narrative Ezy, do you have anything 'specific' that you want to refute in this commentary? Or is this just an opportunity to bandy around a few strawman arguments and cast skepticism the motivations of the commentary. Now the latter I can understand, but it would be good something that provides a rebuttal as opposed to a soapbox opportunity.

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There's nothing to rebut. The article structure is:

1) factual info about btc adoption in El Salvador
2) Bitcoin is volatile and therefore extremely risky
3) Peasants shouldn't have custodianship of their money

Bitcoin doesn't give a toss about these things and is impervious to them, so why waste energy rebutting the article?

The only thing maybe worth considering, is this question: as a citizen of a country with a corrupt government who directly steals from their people, what do you think is likely to be more important - bullet proof self custody and individual sovereignty or volatility? One means you lose 100% of your asset, the other means your asset is worth less on paper but you still have 100% of it. Volatility is the real strawman JC.

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OK, that's a reasonably balanced take in my opinion. In fact, the writer has articulated the situation reasonably well. And most importantly, she is not afraid to address the potential problems without going into great depth of how they will unfold; the El Salvador govt; and Bitcoin itself.

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The real problem is, social media has made people so partisan everything is a red vs blue scenario. El Salvador can actually be both awful as a government generally AND act benevolently by opening their population to BTC as legal tender at the same time. Exactly the same way the lady who wrote this article can pragmaticly discuss the pros and cons of BTC adoption in El Salvador, AND be a complete shill who drops her true intention for the whole article in the last paragraph that she's for the new world order economic panopticon. Few.

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I am not against a reasonable profit...but....If the current system of obsene banking profits derived from poor migrants sending money home to their families in other countries from their hard work there would never be a need for crypto currencies. People talk about how crypto benefits the criminals the most but for what the banks charge to move money internationally they are the criminals and have been for a long long time. People are simply trying to find a way of ditching the criminal banks with a fairer system for the people. Whether that works out or not remains to be seen..... so swap one rigged system for another that is of dubious safety...good luck for trying.

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