Pages:
Author

Topic: This is how 0.037 Bitcoins looks like in Venezuela - page 16. (Read 31697 times)

legendary
Activity: 2968
Merit: 1895
...

bolivarcoin

Please keep us up to date with BTC and Venezuela!

I have read numerous times that something similar (perhaps further along) is happening in Argentina too.  I know two relatively rich Argentines who go there fairly often and are both into BTC.  Yes, they live well when there.

There would likely be a lot of interesting ways to "play the arbitrage" between BTC, the Venezuelan Bolivar and the US$.
legendary
Activity: 896
Merit: 1000
that's beyond insane. you definitely feel rich if you have that much paper money, but as soon as you hear the value in usd you will get shocked.
legendary
Activity: 2884
Merit: 1115
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
Read this article about an Australian guy backpacking in Venezuela,  the article is from april and since then the currency lost 40 % of his value

http://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-advice/i-went-from-broke-to-an-instant-millionaire-here/story-fn6yjihw-1227300495540


Thanks it was an interesting read and it sounds like a pretty cool place to visit for price value gas is really subsidized there but crappy to live in.

I handed over a single hundred dollar bill and began the laborious task of tying up notes with elastic bands.
I had well over 1000 notes to count. I had been in Venezuela just 24 hours and already I was a millionaire here.

For a single US dollar ($1.31) I could buy 12 beers, get a bed for the night, take two taxis or eat in a nice restaurant. I could fill up a car at a local gas-station for 2 bolivars, around 1 US cent.

“If you have dollars, you can live very well for just $50 a week,” he said. “Without dollars, life in Venezuela is too expensive and it’s impossible to get basics, even a toilet roll has to be bought on the black market!”

(In sig campaign terms just had to say it that equals a bed a night for a Hero member 0.16 *270 = 43.20 US)
31 Days of Sleep and 2.59 to spare for food in a month without a 0.02 avatar add-on neat.
(Sort of cynical way of looking at purchasing power)

sr. member
Activity: 252
Merit: 250
Read this article about an Australian guy backpacking in Venezuela,  the article is from april and since then the currency lost 40 % of his value

http://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-advice/i-went-from-broke-to-an-instant-millionaire-here/story-fn6yjihw-1227300495540

and this is a graph of venezuela and us$ exchange rate





so basically if you went with a $100 bill in their country.

you would basically live like a god? And a normal u.s worker would feel like a king and can own many houses if the ops wage is $12 a month.
hero member
Activity: 590
Merit: 500
Read this article about an Australian guy backpacking in Venezuela,  the article is from april and since then the currency lost 40 % of his value

http://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-advice/i-went-from-broke-to-an-instant-millionaire-here/story-fn6yjihw-1227300495540

and this is a graph of venezuela and us$ exchange rate



legendary
Activity: 2884
Merit: 1115
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
But you still have to spend the same ratio as the amount's worth...you can't just convert into their currency, come back, and be rich Sad

Assuming the official rate its a wad worth 600 BF assuming extraoficcial $70,000 BF at 100 USD
Or
72 BF official and 8400 BF.

So its a pretty big difference in that conversion ratio if its only worth $12 USD and will tell me the assumed rate of that wad of cash Smiley

This is why Venezuela will be the first country to adopt a virtual currency.

 0.37 Bitcoins o almost 12 Us$


>>>>
Huh
>>>>

I must have read that wrong somehow
0.37 Bitcoins does not equal $12 US
0.37 Bitcoins = $100 US (@270 US/ BTC)

That or the conversion rate is that bad which would be something else.

Sorry, i made a mistake when posting,

ITS 0.037 BITCOINS, 12 us$
HALF OF MINIMUN WAGE

Thanks that makes a lot more sense in that case that is one heck of a large wad of paper to equal $12 US
(Wonders if you pay with a plastic wrapped wad in the store for stuff)
hero member
Activity: 590
Merit: 500
This is why Venezuela will be the first country to adopt a virtual currency.

 0.37 Bitcoins o almost 12 Us$


>>>>
Huh
>>>>

I must have read that wrong somehow
0.37 Bitcoins does not equal $12 US
0.37 Bitcoins = $100 US (@270 US/ BTC)

That or the conversion rate is that bad which would be something else.

Sorry, i made a mistake when posting,

ITS 0.037 BITCOINS, 12 us$
HALF OF MINIMUN WAGE
legendary
Activity: 1022
Merit: 1000
Great illustration!  Yes, bitcoin is perfect for countries like Venezuela where the government has totally destroyed their currency.

Thanks!
hero member
Activity: 714
Merit: 500
But you still have to spend the same ratio as the amount's worth...you can't just convert into their currency, come back, and be rich Sad
legendary
Activity: 2884
Merit: 1115
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform

Im pretty sure the op, got the price value wrong, but seeing the picture he probably meant $120?

Which is what they earn half a months wage which is still a lot to them.

I thought that initially as well but then checked a backpost in his history to correlate it
He said the minimum wage is $20 dollars a month so he really meant $12 why I rose a bunch of question marks on this statement.


Hi boutiuqe, I was born in Venezuela but i live overseas, Yes, about 100 of the users that already mined some coins are from Venezuela, the rest from other countries.

The minimum wage is only 20$ a month.

There are 4 official currency exchange and one extraoficcial, official is: 1$ - 6Bf, extraoficcial 1$ - 700Bf. No one has access to the oficial exchange rate.

So the question is, is a virtual currency in Venezuela help the economy and his citizens?
The answer is yes, and we all know why, no one can control it, anyone can mine it, storage, sell or buy it, create new business, exchange for whatever, etc, etc.



sr. member
Activity: 434
Merit: 250
This is why Venezuela will be the first country to adopt a virtual currency.

 0.37 Bitcoins o almost 12 Us$

It loos like a lot of money, but is the equivalent to half of the monthly minimum wage



>>>>
Huh
>>>>

I must have read that wrong somehow
0.37 Bitcoins does not equal $12 US
0.37 Bitcoins = $100 US (@270 US/ BTC)

Im pretty sure the op, got the price value wrong, but seeing the picture he probably meant $120?

Which is what they earn half a months wage which is still a lot to them.
legendary
Activity: 868
Merit: 1006
Damn, are you kidding me? I didn't know inflation was this insane in venezuela. Just think about, anyone with an Hero account in venezuela can potentially make a better living off a signature campaign than working an average job over there. Kinda crazy. Let's hope the people there give the middle finger to the idiot in power and adopt BTC.
legendary
Activity: 2884
Merit: 1115
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
This is why Venezuela will be the first country to adopt a virtual currency.

 0.37 Bitcoins o almost 12 Us$


>>>>
Huh
>>>>

I must have read that wrong somehow
0.37 Bitcoins does not equal $12 US
0.37 Bitcoins = $100 US (@270 US/ BTC)

That or the conversion rate is that bad which would be something else.
sr. member
Activity: 434
Merit: 250
holy crap.

Then yes, thats one of the few countries will prosper from bitcoin esp. It might even bring business based on them having enough capital to start their own business.

I didnt know it effected by that much though, a half months salary is what I make every week then..
hero member
Activity: 590
Merit: 500
This is why Venezuela will be the first country to adopt a virtual currency.

 0.037 Bitcoins o almost 12 Us$

It loos like a lot of money, but is the equivalent to half of the monthly minimum wage

Pages:
Jump to: