Latin American Law Review

Lat. Am. Law Rev. | eISSN 2619-4880

Bitcoin in Troubled Economies: The Potential of Cryptocurrencies in Argentina and Venezuela

No. 3 (2019-07-01)
  • Andres F. Cifuentes
    Master of Laws in Media and Technology Law and Policy (LL.M.) – University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA); Master of Laws, Economics and Management – Université Lumière Lyon 2; Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.) – Universidad de los Andes acifuentes@ucla.edu

Abstract

The rise of cryptocurrencies in Argentina and Venezuela in recent years shows how a highly distressed economy could become fertile ground for decentralized digital currency. This article analyzes similar traits between these two nations and examines why a collateral result of high inflation, tangled monetary regulation, and political instability could be the rapid growth of cryptocurrencies that are not linked to a central bank. Mistrust in central government authorities and national currency volatility that surpasses that of traded cryptocurrencies open a window for intangible ways of storing the falling value of local fiat currency. This article sets a general framework in order to have a better understanding of the growth of decentralized digital currencies in developing economies and continues to explain the rise of such technology in recent times in Argentina and Venezuela.

Keywords: Argentina, Venezuela, Bitcoin, cryptocurrencies, hyperinflation

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Copyright (c) 2019 Andres F. Cifuentes

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