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President of El Salvador Says He’s Submitting Bill to Make Bitcoin Legal Tender

An emotional Jack Mallers announced the news at the Bitcoin 2021 conference in Miami.

El Salvador is developing a bill to recognize bitcoin as legal tender, according to President Nayib Bukele. In a videotaped announcement shown Saturday, he said he will submit the bill next week.

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Zap's Jack Mallers announced the news at the Bitcoin 2021 conference in Miami. He said his company is working with Bukele to implement a plan.

The bill must still be reviewed by the country's legislative assembly. But with the populist Bukele’s upstart political party in firm control of that body, approval seemed all but assured Saturday afternoon.

The bill's approval would likely make El Salvador the first nation to adopt a bitcoin standard. Its full text was not immediately available.

A section of the bill read by Mallers during his presentation.
A section of the bill read by Mallers during his presentation.

“As of now, El Salvador is set to be the first bitcoin country,” Mallers said, “and the first country to make bitcoin legal tender and treat it as a world currency and have bitcoin on their reserves.”

But it is not yet clear what being “the first bitcoin country” will mean for the fiscally unstable and oppressively poor Central American nation, where 70% of residents lack a banking account. El Salvador's gross domestic product was $24.6 billion in 2020, according to Statista.

The 39-year-old Bukele claimed in recorded remarks his plan will have short-term benefits for thousands of unbanked individuals. He also claimed it will generate jobs.

“And in the medium and long term, we hope that this decision can help us push humanity, at least a tiny bit, into the right direction,” Bukele said.

Inflation angst

Mallers framed Bukele’s announcement as pushing back against “unprecedented monetary expansion.” He placed particular blame on the U.S Federal Reserve for “crushing emerging markets” such as El Salvador’s dollarized economy by printing greenbacks ad nauseum.

A brief excerpt of what appeared to be Bukele’s bill harped on a similar theme: "Central banks are increasingly taking actions that may cause harm to the economic stability of El Salvador."

The excerpt continued:

“In order to mitigate the negative impact from central banks, it becomes necessary to authorize the circulation of a digital currency with a supply that cannot be controlled by any central bank and is only altered in accord with objective and calclable criteria.”

Bitcoin, the decentralized, hard-capped, stateless, decade-old digital currency, would appear to fit that criteria.

El Salvador’s plan sits in stark contrast to a competing vision of money gaining traction among central banks. About 80% are studying central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) in a global push to make fiat more compatible with the digital economy.

None, however, have seriously considered implementing that through a cryptocurrency beyond their control.

El Salvador experience

Mallers’ Strike, a payments app built on Bitcoin's Lightning Network, has been on the ground in El Salvador this year, with Mallers claiming to have onboarded 20,000 Salvadorans a day during the app’s peak activity in the country.

Read more: Strike Launches Bitcoin Lightning Payment App in El Salvador; Full EU Support Is Next

In an emotional speech, Mallers made it clear that Zap's mission is to serve those in economies he believes are most affected by central bank monetary inflation.

"We want to make cross-border payments free," Maller said. "We want to solve the remittance problem for places that need it the most."

He said Zap will be opening a headquarters in El Salvador in partnership with Blockstream.

Zack Seward

Zack Seward is CoinDesk’s contributing editor-at-large. Up until July 2022, he served as CoinDesk’s deputy editor-in-chief. Prior to joining CoinDesk in November 2018, he was the editor-in-chief of Technical.ly, a news site focused on local tech communities on the U.S. East Coast. Before that, Seward worked as a reporter covering business and technology for a pair of NPR member stations, WHYY in Philadelphia and WXXI in Rochester, New York. Seward originally hails from San Francisco and went to college at the University of Chicago. He worked at the PBS NewsHour in Washington, D.C., before attending Columbia’s Graduate School of Journalism.

Zack Seward
Danny Nelson

Danny is CoinDesk's managing editor for Data & Tokens. He formerly ran investigations for the Tufts Daily. At CoinDesk, his beats include (but are not limited to): federal policy, regulation, securities law, exchanges, the Solana ecosystem, smart money doing dumb things, dumb money doing smart things and tungsten cubes. He owns BTC, ETH and SOL tokens, as well as the LinksDAO NFT.

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Colin Harper, Blockspace Media

Colin writes about Bitcoin. Formerly, he worked at CoinDesk as a tech reporter and Luxor Technology Corp. as head of research. Now, he is the Editor-in-Chief of Blockspace Media, and he also freelances for CoinDesk, Forbes and Bitcoin Magazine. He holds bitcoin.

Colin Harper