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Topic: Bitcoin-freindly countries ; Developed or developing? (Read 1285 times)

sr. member
Activity: 434
Merit: 250
Bitcoin will continue to grow steady in the western world but i'm sure it will shoot up more rapidly in the third world. Its crazy how many people dont even have access to bank accounts there.

it's not just about bank accounts, but also remittance and the fact that there are quite a few 3rd world countries that suffer from hyperinflation due to corruption.

i think bitcoin would be most welcomed in a liberal european country, like portugal or sweden.. but then again, what do i know?
hero member
Activity: 546
Merit: 500
Carpe Diem
I could see governments using bitcoin in third world countries but you shouldn't look there for mass adoption.  A lot of people barely have an internet connection.  They aren't going to understand that your computer has a cryptocurrency on it.  I suppose they could use online wallets.  But the amount they could earn is probably small.
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
I kind of expect the third world to become a major force in the shaping if the future. They need BTC the most and have the most to gain from mass adoption.
sr. member
Activity: 274
Merit: 250
Bitcoin will continue to grow steady in the western world but i'm sure it will shoot up more rapidly in the third world. Its crazy how many people dont even have access to bank accounts there.
sr. member
Activity: 378
Merit: 250
I think currently bitcoin is good in developed countries because just because of better resources they are understanding better and its working too much and in developing counties too much restrictions and its not going as its need to go
hero member
Activity: 840
Merit: 509
I think growth is going to come from both developed and developing nations. Most seems to have come from devolved countries but I think we'll see a boom in devolving countries from the remittance market etc.
hero member
Activity: 896
Merit: 1000
Recent Bitcoin2014 conference was pierced with discussion of the Bitcoin situation in various countries emphasising that the emerging markets are most likely to be the leaders of Bitcoin adoption rather than the citizens of developed countries. How can such phenomenon be explained?
“Governments of emerging economies failed with their obligations to serve the payment system,” Nic Cary, Blockchain.info CEO. “Their economies need Bitcoin.”

Indeed, only 25% of 115 million citizens in Mexico are banked, while 90% of the population has cell phones. How should they make transfers or get paid for their services, especially within the e-commerce sector, which is experiencing a 42% growth since 2012?

According to Raul Nogales, the President of the Satoshi Nakamoto Foundation, the need for sending and receiving money locally as well as remittances (mainly from the US) is crucial and continues to grow rapidly. In 2013, migrants’ transfers to Mexico from the United States, one of the most important financial sources for seventeen Latin nations, compiled US $22 billion. In these areas Bitcoin has been empowering the striving population by creating a faster, more affordable and more reliable option for transferring funds.

The African people are facing similar challenges. The Bitcoin can also help resolve many problems in Africa, since the main characteristic of this digital currency, bank-free decentralisation, seems to be a great fit for the population that is not that well acquainted with advanced technologies — 326 million African citizens are deprived from basic banking services. However, according to the World Bank, Africans send their families approximately US $32 billion a year.

Many investors, believers in the digital currency, claim that the Bitcoin can help such countries as Argentina, Venezuela and India deal with the devaluation of their national currencies. Wences Casares, Xapo CEO, says, “I grew up in Argentina, where at times the economy experienced 12,000% annual inflation. I believe that a digital currency like Bitcoin could solve the disjointed nature of our world economy.” Investors such as Marc van der Chijs, former Dutch serial entrepreneur in China and co-founder of www.Tudou.com, are closely observing the situation with the emerging economies and high-inflation markets considering making investments in the nearest future.

Other countries like Russia could potentially be a haven for Bitcoins. The majority of the government officials together with the nation’s top CEOs maintain the “time will tell” position; whereas, the business-oriented Bitcoin supporters continue to pursue potential benefits until clearer governmental regulations for cryptocurrencies come into play.

However, not everyone, especially in the developed countries, is optimistic about the Bitcoin and its possibility of becoming a powerful player on the financial arena. Recently, Canadian banks have been publishing a lot of reports directed against Bitcoins. The bank’s top policy officials of Senate banking committee in Ottawa remain skeptical about the digital currency and claim that ‘these are early days … and so far digital currencies have not made it to what we call money’.

In parallel, Norway, the richest Scandinavian nation, has shown very little interest in the cryptocurrency and continues to treat Bitcoins as an asset rather than “real money”. Among the Nordic countries, Denmark seems to be the leader of the cryptocurrency world and is about to launch a new Bitcoin exchange, guaranteeing its future clients a crime-free digital environment. Ronny Boesing, the CEO of CCEDK Crypto Coins Exchange Denmark ApS, says the platform will allow users to trade Bitcoin and LiteCoin against each other, as well as in exchange for Danish and Norwegian kroner, British pounds, US dollars and Euros.

Bitcoin can become the solution to the most urgent economical problems around the world, especially in the developing countries that require a lot of additional support. For the Bitcoin, the world is its oyster and this is where its greatest power lies. It is time to take the bull by the horns and take advantage of the incredible potential of this digital currency.   

Courtesy Link ''http://blog.cex.io/btc-friendly/''
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