– Bitcoin crash is dragging an entire country into the abyss
El Salvador is the only country to have invested in digital money on a large scale, financed by taxpayers’ money. Now the course has collapsed – and the country is heading for national bankruptcy.
Cristoph Gurk aus Buenos Aires
Posted today at 11:42 am
El Slavador’s finances are plummeting. Experts warn that the country might soon face bankruptcy. The state of finances has not been rosy for a long time: a government that is keen to spend, plus the pandemic and the consequences of the war in Ukraine. In addition, there is another, completely incalculable point: Bitcoin, the value of the cryptocurrency – and ultimately, above all, its loss in value.
The Bitcoin price has been falling for months. This is annoying for investors and a huge problem for El Salvador. Last June, President Nayib Bukele declared cryptocurrency a legal means of payment. Anyone who wants to can theoretically pay for goods and services with the virtual currency, the bill from the doctor as well as shopping in the supermarket or taxes. This is largely unique in the world.
Applause at the introduction
Apart from a few exceptions, bitcoin has hardly caught on in practice in El Salvador today. Even in the center of the capital, traders do not accept cryptocurrencies, and in rural areas many people are already struggling with poor internet connections or even a lack of electricity.
“Big ideas are beautiful and have great power,” said Nayib Bukele when he first announced at a conference in Miami that his country would introduce Bitcoin as a means of payment. The President promised his country a bright future: El Salvador might soon mine for Bitcoin with energy from volcanic geothermal energy. Investors and founders should come to the country, so many that they even want to build their own city for them, “Bitcoin City”. For these goals, Bukele also invested in cryptocurrencies on a large scale, financed by taxpayers’ money.
It is now becoming increasingly difficult for the country to get money abroad.
The exact number of bitcoins in El Salvador’s treasury today is unknown. The government and the central bank do not provide any official information regarding it, only tweets from the president can be used to calculate that there must be around 2,300 pieces. For a time, this wasn’t a bad deal: Shortly following Bukele started buying bitcoin in the middle of last year, the cryptocurrency’s value skyrocketed.
But there was criticism even then: the International Monetary Fund warned of “significant risks”. When the Bitcoin price began to fall at the end of last year and Bukele ruled more and more authoritarian at the same time, rating agencies began to downgrade the country’s creditworthiness. It is becoming increasingly difficult for the country to get money abroad. At the same time, it cannot print it itself: since the dollar was introduced as official currency around 20 years ago, El Salvador has no longer had its own national currency.
Posted today at 11:42 am
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