My 2 Cents Of Crypto - 1/20/2018 - Can CryptoCurrency Save Brazil From Corruption?

in #brazil7 years ago

brazil-bitcoin.jpg

Can #CryptoCurrencies Save Brazil From Corruption?

You’ve probably heard and read about all the massive gains #Bitcoin and other #CryptoCurrencies had in 2017 and early this year, where there are money and freedom going on, politicians will soon be hot on the trail to tax it to death. It’s no different in Brazil.

Bitcoin is in the news everywhere, and the crypto environment has grown remarkably. Brazil is already the fourth biggest market in the world for cryptos, and exchanges have generated over one hundred jobs since things began to grow quickly in the ides of 2015. Even arbitrage companies like Atlas and #Bitcoin consulting companies like Banco Bitcoin are flourishing. Entrepreneurs are bustling with different ideas on how to make money and generate jobs with new technology, and native #ICOs are germinating.

'Operação Lava Jato' (Operation Car Wash) has become the largest criminal investigation in the history of Brazil, resulting in many politicians, CEOs and executives of some of the largest companies in Brazil going to prison.

That’s not news for you if you have kept up with the libertarian movement in #Brazil. It’s the only country where there are more #Google searches for Ludwig von #Mises than John Maynard #Keynes. It has a huge involvement in Students for Liberty and a very successful Instituto Mises Brasil, which is consistently ranking very well on #Amazon in economics, political science, and all that good stuff. Victories are also coming in politics, with city councilmen being elected in five different capitals, the most notable being Bruno Souza, an anarcho-capitalist elected by the Brazilian Socialist Party. Yes, that is a very, very long story, but it’s happening, and the establishment is kicking back.

In 2015 the Brazilian government announced plans for regulation and two years later, a special commission held many sessions with representatives of most exchanges and experts in the field like Fernando Ulrich, author of A Moeda na Era Digital, a reference book on Bitcoin for Brazilians. However like many countries around the world nothing had really materialized and this was yet another "potential ban" until the 17th Of January.

One of Brazil's politicians involved, House Representative Expedito Netto, made formal recommendations that would essentially ban #Bitcoin from being traded, created, held for third parties, or exchanged for fiat currency unless legal permission is granted. What that permission means, nobody really knows. The penalty he recommends is one to six months in jail or a fine.

Whilst i understand that politicians may be concerned about new technology and how it may or may not effort business, economics, crime etc. But the report only covers the old beaten dog that cryptocurrencies have no backing, are not guaranteed by any central bank and enable crimes such as terrorism and money laundering.

That isn’t to say that Bitcoin cannot be a problem, but banning a technology with such potential without a serious, evidence-based discussion on the matter is careless, to say the least. In a country with over 60 thousand murders per year, holding 8 of the 20 most violent cities in the world, one has to wonder if politicians are not getting their priorities wrong.

But all is not lost. Congressmen Áureo has stated that he wants

“… a libertarian regulation (sic), where the market adjusts to cryptocurrency, but creating some concepts regarding >terrorism and combating money laundering,”

which is far better than a murky ban unless some so-far-undiscussed licensing is granted.

But let’s be frank: Brazil needs Bitcoin. Credit card interest can reach over 400 percent per year while loans with Bitcoin are much cheaper. With $317 billion in imports and exports, the country can benefit greatly from reduced costs on international money transactions. With Ethereum’s power, the legal system and entrepreneurship can be revolutionized, making justice and business much easier, cheaper, and more innovative. According to a study by Credit Suisse, Brazil’s productivity has not risen since 1981, and it’s not going to rise if the government keeps banning everything that can make it more productive with an official 12.4 percent unemployment rate, anything that can generate a job should be welcomed with wide open arms.

Brazil’s economic history can be summarised as follows: the government has made entrepreneurship and hiring almost illegal only to spend decades wondering why the economy doesn’t grow and people have no jobs.

Lets finally break with this model and welcome prosperity.

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Para o Brasil so resta essa saida o bitcoin

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