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    The next currency crisis could turn $300 billion in stablecoins into national currencies

    Bolivia’s government is evaluating whether to include USDT in its regulated payment system alongside the boliviano and the US dollar, according to local media.

    Cryptoassets are authorized in the country with no legal-tender status attached.

    The country’s finance minister described the current state as a prohibition lifted without a clear regulatory framework, with the technical review still underway, La Razon reported.

    A dollar shortage or currency instability pushes citizens toward dollar-stablecoins first, with merchants and businesses accepting them next, banks eventually providing access, and governments formalizing the arrangement only once it has become too widely used to unwind.

    Virtual asset operations in Bolivia rose over 630% in a year, reaching $430 million once electronic payment channels for virtual assets opened. First-half volume climbed from $46.5 million in 2024 to $294 million in the same period of 2025.

    How stablecoin dollarization can happen before governments approve itHow stablecoin dollarization can happen before governments approve it
    A flowchart outlines five steps of stablecoin dollarization, from currency instability to government formalization, citing Bolivia’s 630% rise in virtual asset operations.

    Why the same forces show up in other nations

    The IMF found that naira depreciation, high inflation, and restricted foreign-exchange access pushed Nigerians toward dollar-stablecoins, using them as both a savings hedge and a way to pay overseas suppliers.

    The fund said usage at that scale can resemble digital dollarization and weaken the transmission of domestic monetary policy.

    Nigeria received about $59 billion in crypto-asset inflows between July 2023 and June 2024, accounting for roughly 60% of stablecoin inflows into sub-Saharan Africa since 2019.

    When Nigerian regulators restricted banks’ access to crypto exchanges in 2021, the IMF found that activity moved to peer-to-peer channels, evidence that suppression can push activity into less visible corners of the market, with demand persisting regardless.

    Stablecoin dollarization requires only a smartphone, a wallet, and sufficient merchant acceptance to make the token useful in day-to-day use.

    The BIS describes this progression directly, saying that stablecoins can lower the barriers to holding dollar-denominated value and produce what the institution terms “stealth dollarization” in emerging markets.

    That sequencing puts governments in a reactive position: citizens and merchants build the habit first, and official recognition follows only once the habit is already established, leaving the state to respond to a pattern its own citizens already set.

    Replication driver Bolivia signal Nigeria signal Why it matters globally
    Dollar shortage / currency pressure Government evaluating USDT in payment system Naira depreciation pushed users toward dollar-stablecoins Stablecoins become a private workaround before policy catches up
    FX access constraints Cryptoasset channels reopened after restrictions lifted Restricted FX access drove supplier-payment use Stablecoins can become informal cross-border payment rails
    Fast adoption after restrictions ease Virtual asset operations rose 630% to $430M $59B in crypto inflows from July 2023 to June 2024 Demand can scale quickly once access exists
    Regulatory suppression risk Technical review still underway 2021 restrictions pushed activity toward P2P channels Bans may reduce visibility rather than eliminate use
    Policy consequence USDT could enter regulated payments without legal-tender status IMF warns of digital dollarization risk Governments may formalize behavior they did not initiate

    What breaks once the pattern scales

    Monetary policy reaches fewer parts of the economy once savings and invoices are denominated in a currency that the central bank doesn’t issue.

    The IMF makes this point about Nigeria, warning that widespread use of dollar-stablecoins can reduce demand for the local currency and weaken a central bank’s tools to influence economic behavior.

    The BIS says interest-bearing stablecoins could compete directly with domestic-currency deposits in high-inflation economies. That deposit migration into stablecoins is already a live regulatory concern, since a bank can’t lend against dollars held in a private wallet the way it can against a deposit account.

    Capital controls lose their grip once residents can move savings into dollar instruments from a phone.

    The BIS says stablecoins can let residents bypass capital controls and foreign-exchange regulations, with smartphone-based transfers harder for authorities to monitor than conventional bank deposits.

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