Investing 1% of the city funds is almost nothing, I didn't know how much the overall fund they had but I think 1% allocated is a very small amount.
It seems they are trying a small amount that they can afford.
But the good thing is the exemption on the tax which is the right thing to do than trying to regulate Bitcoin on their own which they can't.
I know the government is fully relying on collecting Taxes, it may be they understand how Bitcoin will work.
Indeed, 1% seems really a little too small for an investment. This won't really be felt as this is just a very little portion of the city's fund unless the fund we are talking about is a hundred million, then it would be sufficient to be an investment that could aggressively earn a profit over time. However, if that would be the case, they would stake a lot of the people's funds in which could stir a heated argument and protests because there are people who are not really in favor of bitcoin and other crypto-related things.
There is no small amount of investment If you carefully position yourself in a safer side especially that you're using a small percentage of the city treasury. Well, for exact same reason why the mayor decided to put only 1% so people won't worry that much and start a protest like what you have said.
Also, I believe this is done with the consent of all other officials because this won't push through if ever it is only done according to the mayor's lone decision. I just hope it won't spark protest and chaos just like what happened in El Salvador. Hopefully, more places and government officials would be more open with the idea of bitcoin and crypto because this would be an achievement to our community no matter how small.
Of course, Brazil is a democratic country so there are going to have a governing bodies that votes to allow the mayor's decision to invest 1% of the city treasury to Bitcoin.
I guess the mayor is really planning his moves to such project so his people won't overreact.