- A new report from the International Monetary Fund has emphasised Bitcoin’s role as a unique economic driver.
- The analysis focussed on cross-border transactions to identify how Bitcoin was similar (or unique) to traditional capital flow.
- The report uncovered that BTC is often used by people in developing nations to circumvent capital flow restrictions and financial instability such as inflation and corruption.
- The IMF also found that on-chain BTC transactions are typically higher-value than off-chain transactions (eg. L1 vs L2).
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) released a recent report that looked into Bitcoin’s use as an international currency. Specifically, the paper – titled A Primer on Bitcoin Cross-Border Flows – dissects BTC’s efficacy as a global mode of exchange by analysing both on-chain and off-chain transactional data. And the results bode pretty well for the decentralised currency, with the IMF labelling it a “necessary financial tool” – especially for users in regions battling corruption and war.
Related: Tim Draper Says Bitcoin To Hit $10 Million As It Becomes An ‘Indispensable Financial Asset’
Bitcoin Flows Unique to Crypto, Separate to Capital Flows
One might expect that Bitcoin, often touted as a replacement to traditional currency, would simply have similar transactional inflows/outflows as fiat, albeit at a different scale. However, according to the IMF report, this is not the case at all.
Our findings suggest that Bitcoin cross-border flows respond differently than capital flows to traditional global drivers.
Breaking it down, the analysis uncovered some common themes for Bitcoin’s use as a cross-border form of payment. Predictably, the report found that BTC had a fairly global footprint, being used as a form of cross-border exchange in over 100 countries. Interestingly, much of the BTC inflows were concentrated in Latin American nations, such as Argentina and Venezuela. Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe were also strongly represented by the data.
In general, nations that receive large amounts of capital flow had lower BTC inflow, and vice versa. This suggests that Bitcoin hasn’t replaced traditional capital markets, but rather fulfils its own niche. In particular, the report suggests that BTC’s greatest cross-border use is to avoid “capital flow restrictions”.
This is particularly relevant in the aforementioned highly-represented nations (such as Venezuela), which grapple with severe economic instability due to inflation, government control and financial corruption.
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The report goes on to emphasise that Bitcoin requires improved global frameworks – both in terms of infrastructure and regulatory clarity – before it can really live up to its potential as a financial game-changer. However, even with such restrictions in place, the IMF’s report has proved Bitcoin’s worth as a stalwart of the financial industry.
Source:
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