26 Jul
26Jul

El Salvador's pioneering adoption of Bitcoin as legal tender has transitioned from a nationwide initiative to a strategy of government accumulation, with little to show for its impact on ordinary citizens. 

Quentin Ehrenmann, general manager of the NGO My First Bitcoin, stated to Reuters that an agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has fundamentally altered the country's Bitcoin policy. "Since the government entered into this contract with the IMF, Bitcoin is no longer legal tender, and there has been no significant effort to educate the public," Ehrenmann said. The IMF deal, a condition for a $1.4 billion loan, also stipulated that the government must not purchase any more Bitcoin, contradicting the Bitcoin Office's claims of continued daily accumulation.

To comply with the loan agreement, El Salvador's legislature reduced public sector Bitcoin involvement in January, casting doubt on the long-term sustainability of President Nayib Bukele’s initiative. While the government continues to build its Bitcoin reserves, the strategy appears to be more about benefiting state finances than fostering widespread adoption among the population.

On the ground, the results for everyday Bitcoin usage remain mixed. While visitors can still make payments with Bitcoin through services like IBEX Pay's Lightning Network, the need to assist a hostel clerk with a transaction highlights the persistent education gaps that are hindering broader adoption.

This shift reveals a core conflict between El Salvador's international financial obligations and its cryptocurrency ambitions. The Bitcoin experiment is now in a state of institutional retreat, even as the technical infrastructure remains functional.

July 2025, Cryptoniteuae

Comments
* The email will not be published on the website.