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Following the perceived successes El Salvadorâs president, Nayib Bukele has achieved since legalizing Bitcoin, a lawmaker in Mexico now wants the same for her country. 39-year-old senator Indira Kempis Martinez is set to become the first Mexican senator to push for the mainstream adoption of Bitcoin, and she is citing El Salvadorâs milestone achievements as her motivation to do so.
One of El Salvadorâs remarkable feats is onboarding more Bitcoin users in just half a year. There are now over three million El Salvadorians representing close to 50% of the countryâs total population with an active crypto walletâroughly 1.3 million citizens more than the number of traditional bank account owners. The Nuevo LeĂłn senator sees this as an avenue for Mexico to cut back on millions of dollars of international transfer charges, and attract investors.
Already, El Salvador has received an investment pledge from JAI energy, Wyomingâs largest mining company, and is currently in talks with lawmakers from Dubai on issues surrounding Bitcoin adoption. President Bukele had also begun plans to quadruple El Salvadorâs energy capacity for more mining activities, using geothermal power from an inactive volcano.
Regardless of its strides, however, the young and Bitcoin-friendly leader has not been without a barrage of global criticisms from international financial regulatory bodies. The IMF had warned that âthe authorities to narrow the scope of the Bitcoin law by removing Bitcoinâs legal tender status,â It believes âthe adoption of a cryptocurrency as legal tender⊠entails large risks for financial and market integrity, financial stability and consumer protection.â
Added to that, a significant percentage of its 1,800 BTC stash is currently being held underwater.
Senator Kempis remains quite undeterred by the volatility or regulatory clampdown. Beyond the prospects Bitcoin holds, it appears Kempisâs approach to it is from the standpoint of global perception and regional pride. She was quoted as saying:
âIt is a historic opportunity that this type of project is being carried out in a Central American country. Every time El Salvador was discussed, it was always to address issues of migration, violence, and organized crime, and now the worldâs gaze is not on those public problems, but because of this great call at a global level with bitcoinâ
âIt is clear to me that financial exclusion is one of the public problems that few of us have addressed with feasible alternatives, and that this type of technology is allowing us to generate an alternative so that millions of people can be included in the financial system,â
There are currently over 3.1 million Mexicans representing 2.5% of the total population that identify as owning or trading Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.
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