Paraguay is in serious need to wealth distribution equality. Read the article below,
It says, "The distribution of wealth is very unequal: 80 percent of land is held by 2.5 percent of the population, and 161 people control 90 percent of the wealth of our country."
I hope bitcoin help this country to come out of this situation and probably streamline their wealth distribution.
Bitcoin will simply make things worse, bitcoin is not some socialist tool to redistribute wealth.
Despite what some dream of it the reality is that
BTC is just a bunch of code, nothing more, it doesn't have political views, it doesn't fight for social justice, and more important that all it has no will of its own and far more importantly it obeys the free economy rules. Meaning that whoever has money will be able to buy bitcoin, you're dirt poor you will not be able to afford anything.
So, what will change and how? The rich will have more bitcoins and the poor will still have none, bitcoin won't rain wealth on them, won't suddenly give them better jobs and training, and for sure it won't make the rich poor as in some socialist utopia.
Back to the topic, I don't understand why people still talk about Paraguay making Bitcoin legal tender, it's obvious this will not happen now and the bill they've presented has nothing to do with it. From a miner's perspective it makes things worse:
Paraguayan regulation includes the application and issuance of licenses for mining companies, cryptocurrency traders whom it calls "intervening agents," preparing a registry of exchanges and service providers for digital assets, and establishing an energy consumption plan to supply the nascent industry. Those companies or individuals that carry out activities outside the regulations could be sanctioned with administrative or even criminal measures, that is, offenders could go to jail.
This is a damn 180 turn from what was supposed to happen, they went straight for regulation, asking for a license for every bitcoin elated activity and making mining without government authorization a crime. This ain't Salvador is China-style regulation.
The most significant difference is that the Paraguay bill does not grant Bitcoin, or any cryptocurrency, legal tender status – pending approval, digital assets will be classified as property
So no legal tender, which means taxation, and guess what:
“Digital assets are not legal tender currencies used by the Paraguayan State, and for this reason, they are not backed by the Central Bank of Paraguay.” Legislators propose in the project that any transaction carried out with cryptocurrencies, from and to the country, must be taxed with a percentage yet to be defined.
Probably the biggest flop, it would have been better if they would have just stayed quiet.