El Salvador passed a bill making Bitcoin legal tender this week, putting it on equal footing with the country’s official national currency, the U.S dollar.
While this was celebrated as a victory for Bitcoin, the (IMF) has since voiced its concerns with the move. During a press conference on the matter, IMF spokesperson Gerry Rice said:“Adoption of bitcoin as legal tender raises a number of macroeconomic, financial and legal issues that require very careful analysis. We are following developments closely, and we’ll continue our consultations with the authorities.”
IMF Does Not Approve Of Sovereign Adoption of Bitcoin In El Salvador
El Salvador moved quickly from announcing its intent to adopt Bitcoin through to congressional discussions and then passing the proposal into law.“We want to work with you, trade, travel, get to know each other, and help where we can. Our doors are more open than ever. But with all due respect: we are cleaning our house… and that’s none of your business.”
The Crypto Community Responds
Social media comments on the matter include points such as El Salvador should be to decide its own monetary policy, and calls for as the IMF is doing this to protect its power of influence. On the matter of El Salvador’s $1 billion budget shortfall, broached the idea of the Bitcoin community raising the money and loaning it to the Central American country.later tweeted about his “Bitcoin Mining Backed Volcano Bond” (BMBVB) idea. Precise details on this are scant at the moment. But presumably, as the name suggests, it would be backed by revenues generated from volcano-powered mining grids. said he spoke with the country’s geothermal electricity company yesterday to action volcano-powered Bitcoin mining.“I’m sure can arrange a $1 billion lending facility stop-gap for El Salvador. The IMF can go f*** themselves.”
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