Bolivia Has No International Power Over Cryptocurrency Use | El país no tiene poder internacional en uso de criptomonedas

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ASFI Acknowledges Bolivia Has No International Power Over Cryptocurrency Use

Cryptocurrency use is growing around the world. | Economia3.com

After Bolivia’s Central Bank (BCB) approved the use of cryptocurrencies in the country for transactions, the Financial System Supervisory Authority (ASFI) took another step by enacting regulations for the operation of financial technology companies (ETF), commonly known as fintechs in the international sphere. The regulation, which came into effect on Thursday, June 5, acknowledges that it will only govern local operations. As a result, ASFI’s director, Ivette Espinoza, ruled out any possibility that the regulation could apply to international platforms or exchanges such as Binance.

This stance was in response to online claims suggesting the new regulatory framework aimed to force such companies to comply with Bolivian laws. “Just imagine the power we Bolivians have to regulate operations that are international in nature,” Espinoza remarked sarcastically during a press conference.

According to cryptocurrency expert Chris Párraga, the statement “reflects an uncomfortable truth: Bolivia, with its small market and crisis-stricken economy, lacks both the capacity and the incentive to take on international platforms.”

He added that the country “is facing a chronic shortage of U.S. dollars, an official exchange rate disconnected from reality, and a heavy dependence on platforms like Binance to access stablecoins and get reference prices for the U.S. dollar in the parallel market.”

To understand the scale difference between Bolivia’s market and those of countries like Argentina, one only needs to look at the chart compiled by analytics firm Chainalysis. Between July 2023 and June 2024, Argentina received nearly $100 billion in cryptocurrency flows, followed by Brazil with slightly less, and Mexico in third place with over $60 billion. While Bolivia ranks 12th in the region—above countries like Panama or Puerto Rico—its virtual asset movement, as the BCB prefers to call it, reached $294 million in the first half of this year, with an annual total of $430 million.

“Regulating Binance would not only be a logistical and diplomatic challenge, but could also cut off a crucial lifeline for Bolivians seeking to protect their savings or make transactions in a very hostile economic environment,” he commented.

The regulation implemented by ASFI aims to govern the establishment and operation of ETFs, as well as to ensure that companies established in Bolivia and offering technologically innovative services in financial markets, securities, and insurance comply with local regulations.

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