El Salvadorean president Nayib Bukele wants his country to lead the way globally for bitcoin.
That was the message President Bukele had for attendees at the Miami-set Bitcoin 2021 conference in a pre-taped video that played on Saturday. He announced a partnership with the payments app Strike that will pave the way for for bitcoin to join the U.S. dollar as an acceptable form of hard cash in El Salvador.
"Next week I will send to congress a bill that will make bitcoin a legal tender," Bukele said in the video. The report goes on to note, in CNBC's words, that Strike will help to "build the country’s modern financial infrastructure using bitcoin technology."
The move is notable for one, simple reason: Bukele is positioning El Salvador to be the first nation in the world to put bitcoin on equal footing with cash payments. There are plenty of privately owned marketplaces that accept various forms of cryptocurrency as payments, but that recognition hasn't yet happened on the national level in any one country.

Speaking on behalf of Strike, company founder Jack Mallers celebrated the move as "the shot heard 'round the world for bitcoin." He also noted that that "[h]olding bitcoin provides a way to protect developing economies from potential shocks of fiat currency inflation."
That second point is a debatable assertion, for what it's worth, since bitcoin has proven to be prone to wild fluctuations in value. It's influenced by different forces than fiat currency, the value of which is essentially derived from faith in the government that minted it. But bitcoin's value jumps around plenty, too.
As Mashable's own cryptocurrency expert Stan Schroeder wrote in February: "Despite the constant price rise over the years, Bitcoin is still highly volatile. The price of one bitcoin briefly reached $50,689 on the popular exchange Binance, but it plummeted just as fast, and is sitting at around $49,500 at writing time."
That volatility depends less on global shifts in national economies and more on market interest. That's why many have taken the view that Elon Musk's vigorous tweets about one form of cryptocurrency or another are a form of market manipulation. After Bitcoin's $50,000 high in February, the price plummeted by thousands after Musk announced in mid-May that Tesla would no longer accept Bitcoin payments, reversing the announcement from a couple months earlier in March — not long after Bitcoin's $50,000 high — that the company wouldaccept them.
All of which is to say: Bitcoin isn't necessarily the guard against inflation — or value shifts in general — that Mallers described. It's an interesting development for the global financial system for all sorts of reasons, but sharp shifts in value are well within the realm of possibility (because it's happened before).
SEE ALSO:Why Elon Musk has suddenly fallen out with BitcoinThe CNBC report on all this notes that, in addition to the Strike partnership, El Salvador is working with "a team of bitcoin leaders to help build a new financial ecosystem with bitcoin as the base layer." The measure is seen as likely to pass through El Salvador's legislature without incident.
Strike, an app that uses bitcoin and blockchain tech to enable payments between users around the world, launched in El Salvador in March and it became the country's most downloaded app. As CNBC notes, the country's economy is primarily cash-based, with a significant majority of the public (70 percent) having no bank account or credit cards.
In that context, the move to codify bitcoin as the foundation of El Salvador's financial system makes sense. The people are already moving in that direction, apparently, and the country asserting a measure of control over its usage means the movement of money can be regulated and properly taxed.
Bukele is popular with the El Salvadorean public, though the conduct of his administration has also drawn the attention of Human Rights Watch for the undermining of "basic democratic checks and balances." This includes intimidation of legislators and multiple acts of defiance to national Supreme Court rulings related to COVID-19 precautions.
TopicsBitcoinCryptocurrency
(责任编辑:百科)
MashReads Podcast: What makes a good summer read?
Ultimate drama: The World Series is going to Game 7
The 'Stranger Things' kids are back in one beautiful photo
From headbands to pantsuits, this Instagram tracks Hillary Clinton's most famous looks
Fiji wins firstWatch MTV's Video Music Awards 2016 livestream
It's MTV Video Music Awards night. Are you ready?Kanye's going to be there, and he's going to say th
...[详细]From headbands to pantsuits, this Instagram tracks Hillary Clinton's most famous looks
Hillary Clinton's decades-long political career has also spawned some pretty memorable fashion.Lucki
...[详细]Butterball will open a 24/7 text line this Thanksgiving for all your turkey questions
On Thanksgiving, when wine-drunk relatives fill kitchens with unsolicited cooking advice, hosts need
...[详细]Florida loves attention more than any other state in America
Casey Anthony. George Zimmerman. Donald Duck.What do they all have in common? Florida.Florida is a m
...[详细]Old lady swatting at a cat ends up in Photoshop battle
We all have that relative who gets annoyed with the cat.
。This timeless photo of an old woman shooing
...[详细]Brexit just got a whole lot more interesting
British MPs will have their say on whether the UK can trigger Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, which
...[详细]Dorm neighbors exchange honest notes about too
Being stuck listening to your neighbors having loud sex is rough.Being #ForeverAlone and having to l
...[详细]Apple just blocked a controversial crime reporting app
Apple has removed a controversial crime reporting app from its app store.The Vigilante app, which is
...[详细]Fyvush Finkel, Emmy winner for 'Picket Fences,' dies at 93
NEW YORK (AP) — Actor Fyvush Finkel, the plastic-faced Emmy Award-winning character actor whos
...[详细]Ground control to Jared Goff: Why won't the Rams play their franchise QB?
"I know what my teammates think about me, I know what my coaches think about me," Jared Goff told Ma
...[详细]