I wonder if this will prompt the USA to import more products from El Salvador to reduce the size of the remittances sector and thereby lessen the reason people use Bitcoin in the first place.
Before anyone tells the Salvadorians to export more products... they do... and they do it by working in a country that exports to El Salvador.
I doubt the US government cares enough about this to do much of anything, and I'm not sure how importing more products would even work. Would Congress just buy a bunch of Salvadoran coffee beans?
It's true they don't work that way because developed nations want to exploit developing nations rather than cooperate with them to maximize well being in the entire world.
Over the long term it is quite foolish because a debt claim against a weaker country will turn out to be worthless.
> prompt the USA to import more products from El Salvador to reduce the size of the remittances sector and thereby lessen the reason people use Bitcoin
Who in America would benefit from fighting this? Crypto is a real industry. It’s more profitable for the financial sector than similar activity in U.S. dollars. And the Fed doesn’t thoroughly love that it has to take international factors into account when its political mandate is purely domestic.
There is the interventionist foreign policy elite, but they aren’t on strong footing right now. The claim that the U.S. is hellbent on preserving the primacy of the U.S. dollar is largely a myth.
> The claim that the U.S. is hellbent on preserving the primacy of the U.S. dollar is largely a myth.
Could you elaborate, please? It was my understanding (perhaps mistakenly) that because so many foreign entities, be they countries, corporations etc, depend on the USD and it functions both as a reserve and for international trading, the U.S. Federal Reserve can be more aggressive with "dovish" policy.
Or stated another way, if fewer people/institutions held USD abroad, the risk of inflation would be much greater.
Well, there would be less immigration from Salvador to the USA so basically people concerned about economic refugees. I don't mean this in a xenophobic way. Balanced trade will improve the conditions in El Salvador and thereby let people stay in their home country voluntarily rather than be forced out for economic reasons.
Before anyone tells the Salvadorians to export more products... they do... and they do it by working in a country that exports to El Salvador.