In a blog post, the CEO claimed that Bukele’s move was praiseworthy and hit out at its many naysaying critics in the mainstream Western media. He stated that the move “deserves praise, not derision.”
But his boldest prediction was that other nations would soon follow in Bukele’s footsteps. Höptner wrote:
“My prediction is that by the end of next year, we’ll have at least five countries that accept Bitcoin as legal tender. All of them will be developing countries. […] I think developing countries will jump into crypto in 2022.”
The CEO didn’t specify what those five countries might be.
Höptner denied that his post was a “love letter” to Bukele, and warned that the crypto sector should shy away from paying too much attention to “individuals” – giving the example of Elon Musk’s almost vice-like control over dogecoin (DOGE) prices earlier this year.
The BitMEX supremo gave a number of reasons why he thought “developing” nations would be keen to jump onboard the BTC train, namely:
Remittance benefits
With many economies “reliant on remittances” for a large chunk of their income, the need for lower-cost, “24/7/365” transfers is high. He added, remittance figures “would be a lot higher – and families in developing countries would be in a better position – with a cheaper method of remitting funds.”
Fighting inflation
Höptner noted that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) expects inflation in the developing world to hit 5.4% this year – double the figure predicted for richer economies. While “people seek alternatives to fiat currency during inflation crises,” he opined that bitcoin fixes this with its capped supply of 21m coins. He claimed that “developed countries and/or their people are noticing.”
Political point-scoring
The BitMEX CEO claimed that world leaders “have an interest in positioning themselves as progressive, populist and new-age thinkers” – and will be hoping to make a political statement by adopting similar policies to Bukele.
However, Höptner added a caveat, writing:
“Any failings by leaders in the implementation phase may hurt wider adoption of cryptocurrencies in general. That’s the dangerous dilemma that lies ahead.”
And he concluded by remarking nations “who have the most to lose by continuing the status quo are acting in their self-interest” if they decide to “explore alternative options” such as bitcoin adoption.
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Learn more:
– Buoyant Bukele Blasts Critics as Bitcoin Price Booms and Salvadorans Buy BTC
– Bitcoin Lightning Network Is Growing Faster Than You Think
– Latin America Talks Bitcoin, Regulation, Mining & Cocaine
– IMF: Issue CBDCs, Improve Cross-border Payments to Counter Crypto’s ‘Phenomenal Growth’
– Why Fiat Currency Is More Confusing Than Crypto
– Bitcoin Is More ‘Public’ Money than Central Bank-Issued Fiat Currencies