

Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) and El Salvador made global headlines in June 2021, when the Central American nation announced it would make the crypto legal tender.
It became the first country in the world to do so.
(The Central African Republic followed suit in May this year, becoming the second nation to adopt BTC as a nationally recognised currency.)
The Bitcoin adoption became official on 7 September last year. At the time, El Salvadorâs flamboyant president Nayib Bukele pronounced the token would change his nation for the better.
And for the first few months, the Bitcoin price kept climbing, trading at all-time highs of US$68,790 on 10 November.
But youâre likely aware of the crash thatâs happened since. BTC is currently trading for US$19,864, down 71% from its highs.
Is El Salvadorâs Bitcoin adoption fizzling?
The big price falls over the past 10 months certainly have not spurred Salvadorans into rushing to embrace the crypto instead of US dollars, which remain the favoured currency.
As to the future of the nationâs great crypto experiment, that depends on who you ask.
El Salvadorâs former central bank chief Carlos Acevedo is decidedly on the fizzling side.
According to Acevedo (courtesy of Bloomberg):
No one really talks about Bitcoin here anymore. Itâs kind of been forgotten. I donât know if youâd call that a failure, but it certainly hasnât been a success… In El Salvador we have a good payments network, so why transfer money with cryptocurrency?
Only around 2% of remittances have been sent from crypto wallets, according to the central bank.
An opinion poll conducted by the Universidad Centroamericana also found less than stellar support for Bitcoin in day-to-day use.
âIf you go to any market in El Salvador, youâre more likely to receive an insult than be able to purchase something in Bitcoin. Itâs not a part of peopleâs daily routine,â director of the universityâs public opinion institute Laura Andrade said.
Atop the less than hoped for adoption rates, the governmentâs adoption of Bitcoin as legal tender has also seen the International Monetary Fund delay approval of a US$1.3 billion program.
Chief operating officer of Torino Capital Fabiano Borsato said (quoted by Bloomberg):
The Bitcoin experiment promoted by the Bukele administration has significantly raised the marketâs risk perception of the country. Itâs being implemented in a context of fragile public finances, high and persistent fiscal deficits and doubts about the rule of law in the country.
This, in our opinion, will prevent El Salvador from accessing financing in the international markets under favourable conditions in the short and medium term.
Or is BTC adoption just getting off the ground?
Not everyone agrees that the great crypto experiment is a flop.
El Salvadorâs digital wallet, Chivo, has more than four million users, according to finance minister Alejandro Zelaya. And he says itâs promoting a rapid rebound in tourism and drawing in international blockchain companies.
And the government still intends to issue its Bitcoin-backed bond, the so-called âvolcano tokenâ.
Chief technology officer at Bitfinex Paolo Ardoino is also among the proponents of El Salvadorâs crypto embrace.
âAssuming cars were a failure because after the very first year Ford started production in 1896 no more than 2% of the population had a car wouldâve been quite myopic,â he said.
Ardoino added, âThe government has a long-term vision. The crypto industry is highly technological and that is the type of industry that everyone should want in its country.â
And founder of Bank to the Future Simon Dixon disagrees that adoption levels are low after visiting the nation last month.
According to Dixon (quoted by Bloomberg):
I donât see adoption as low. I see a country where everybody has a Bitcoin wallet, and everybody knows what Bitcoin is. This is the first time Iâve ever met a government that has a president who has assembled a team that really operates with the urgency and impact of a fast-growing company.
Fizzling or just taking off?
Time will tell.
The post Is El Salvadorâs great Bitcoin experiment fizzling or just getting started? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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Motley Fool contributor Bernd Struben has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Bitcoin. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Bitcoin. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.
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