Unfortunately, it is not fully because of the volatility, but the regulation. Well, yeah, but indeed I live in a country that only legalizes crypto as a digital asset. [...] Our central bank also still does not regulate the crypto as a currency. The regulation is that we can buy and trade or make it as an investment, but for payment, not yet.
I agree that regulations can complicate a "bankless life with crypto" in some countries. In other regions, however, this is not an issue. The regulation of your country seems a little bit strange however: aren't you allowed to barter an asset for another (without money intermediation)? I ask this because if Bitcoin is regulated as an "asset" or "good", and not as "money", then I interpret that paying something with Bitcoin would be barter. I know however that there are some countries where bartering is a grey area, and others that explicitly forbid payments with cryptocurrencies.
For what? What i will get if start to live bankless?
Independence. This matters, especially for people who:
- aren't accepted by banks at all (e.g. because they lack a permanent address)
- are accepted only if they accept unfavourable conditions (in most cases, a high monthly fee) - e.g. because they are indebted
- do not want to expose themselves to the risk of the bank getting broke and/or losing money because of a state tax on bank holdings (e.g. Cyprus some years ago)
There is also sometimes a (small) risk that the bank cancels your account without you necessarily having done anything wrong - only that your habits are seen as risky for them or they don't make enough profit with you.
I'm not saying that banks are evil - but I question the level of dependence on them, in our modern Capitalist system. Banks are businesses, they're not charities (at least most of them are not, and charity-like banks do not exist everywhere) and thus have to care about their profitability - so their behaviour is understandable. But: There should be a real alternative, apart from cash. I for myself also cannot still live without banks - while I could in theory live with crypto/cash, some tax payments in my country are only allowed via bank wire.
[...] the fact is that people living under poverty is not even bothered to start a bank account is because they might be earning wages on a daily basis and there is nothing to save in a savings account and you cannot expect them to invest their money in a volatile market.
Exactly, that's why I'm interested in hedging solutions to be protected from volatility. Simply living with Bitcoin, without any hedging, would be economical suicide for most people (even in not-so-poor countries).