Venezuela's current economic situation reveals an interesting phenomenon—cryptocurrencies are becoming everyday payment tools for ordinary people.
Last year, Venezuela's local currency, the Bolívar, experienced a staggering devaluation. At the beginning of the year, 1 USD could only be exchanged for 52.02 Bolívares, but by the end of the year, it skyrocketed to 301.37, a devaluation of over 480%. This rapid depreciation completely shattered people's confidence in the local currency.
What happens when you go shopping or buy groceries? In convenience stores in downtown Caracas, if you use Bolívares to buy a bottle of mineral water, the clerk will mostly refuse and instead point to USDT or a QR code of a major exchange on the cash register. From food procurement and daily consumption to personal savings, Venezuelans have spontaneously built a financial network that completely bypasses traditional financial systems.
More importantly, after the official withdrawal of the Petro in 2024, this trend has accelerated. Without official backing of a crypto asset, the public has become even more determined to choose stablecoins like USD. What was once an asset held only by speculators has now become a payment tool for market vendors—this shift is somewhat magical but also incredibly real.
Why has it come to this? Looking back at history, during Hugo Chávez's rule in the 2000s, Venezuela profited immensely from high oil prices. But the government did not handle this good fortune well; instead, it engaged in unchecked spending, excessive market intervention, and continuous money printing. The more welfare programs piled up, the larger the deficit became, and eventually inflation ran out of control like a wild horse, impossible to tame.
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4am_degen
· 01-14 02:21
Holy crap, 480% devaluation? This is even worse than my crypto losses, haha.
Even the market grandmas are using USDT, and we're still here debating when to get on board.
Real Web3 use cases, but unfortunately, they arrived so painfully.
The government keeps printing money until no one believes it, and the people have turned cryptocurrencies into hard currency themselves.
That's why I say stablecoins are the future. Venezuelans have already started voting with their feet.
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BrokenDAO
· 01-14 01:39
This is a classic case of incentive distortion. The government initially wanted to "manage" the economy through the Petro, but ended up accelerating the collapse of trust. The private sector's bypassing of the official system is happening much faster than expected.
Speaking of which, this logic applies equally to on-chain governance— the more power tries to centralize control, the faster people will flee. History repeats itself this way.
In fact, Venezuela now serves as a counterexample, proving what "the harsher the government intervention, the more thorough the people's self-rescue" means. This time, it’s using stablecoins to replace traditional finance.
The essence of this phenomenon is the shift in the game-theoretic equilibrium point. When government credit collapses to a certain extent, USD stablecoins become the optimal choice. Ironically, this also highlights the fragility of centralized systems.
The incident of being refused to buy groceries with Bolivars is actually the most direct vote of the market against policy failure. It’s more honest than any institutional design.
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TokenomicsTrapper
· 01-11 07:25
actually if you read the venezuela playbook... government prints unlimited money, market does what markets do. textbook greater fool theory but with hyperinflation seasoning. and now grandmas are holding stablecoins instead of the currency their govt destroyed lmao... called this pattern years ago, it's predictably dumping on schedule
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OnlyOnMainnet
· 01-11 04:52
480% devaluation, how desperate is that? People are even avoiding using the native currency for groceries. Web3 is really changing reality.
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GasFeeCry
· 01-11 04:48
Market vendors are all using USDT, and we're still watching the ups and downs?
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480% devaluation... this is the real problem of money and science, .
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Oil coin is out, USDT takes the stage, even magical realism literature can't write this story.
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Traditional financial systems: We haven't even reacted yet? The public: We don't need you anymore, bye.
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So, true adoption has never been driven by institutions; it's always been forced out.
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Even grandmas can scan to receive USDT, while Web3 in some countries is still just talk on paper.
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Chávez printed money until the end, and everyone used stablecoins... this causal relationship is so ironic.
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SocialFiQueen
· 01-11 04:48
480% devaluation? Oh my, this is what true chaos looks like. No wonder aunties are all scanning USDT codes.
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liquiditea_sipper
· 01-11 04:36
Damn, a 480% devaluation, I was stunned. That's why ordinary people are all switching to USDT.
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GasFeeBeggar
· 01-11 04:34
480% devaluation, this is damn outrageous, no wonder ordinary people are rushing into crypto.
Venezuela's current economic situation reveals an interesting phenomenon—cryptocurrencies are becoming everyday payment tools for ordinary people.
Last year, Venezuela's local currency, the Bolívar, experienced a staggering devaluation. At the beginning of the year, 1 USD could only be exchanged for 52.02 Bolívares, but by the end of the year, it skyrocketed to 301.37, a devaluation of over 480%. This rapid depreciation completely shattered people's confidence in the local currency.
What happens when you go shopping or buy groceries? In convenience stores in downtown Caracas, if you use Bolívares to buy a bottle of mineral water, the clerk will mostly refuse and instead point to USDT or a QR code of a major exchange on the cash register. From food procurement and daily consumption to personal savings, Venezuelans have spontaneously built a financial network that completely bypasses traditional financial systems.
More importantly, after the official withdrawal of the Petro in 2024, this trend has accelerated. Without official backing of a crypto asset, the public has become even more determined to choose stablecoins like USD. What was once an asset held only by speculators has now become a payment tool for market vendors—this shift is somewhat magical but also incredibly real.
Why has it come to this? Looking back at history, during Hugo Chávez's rule in the 2000s, Venezuela profited immensely from high oil prices. But the government did not handle this good fortune well; instead, it engaged in unchecked spending, excessive market intervention, and continuous money printing. The more welfare programs piled up, the larger the deficit became, and eventually inflation ran out of control like a wild horse, impossible to tame.