Tap to Trade in Gate Square, Win up to 50 GT & Merch!
Click the trading widget in Gate Square content, complete a transaction, and take home 50 GT, Position Experience Vouchers, or exclusive Spring Festival merchandise.
Click the registration link to join
https://www.gate.com/questionnaire/7401
Enter Gate Square daily and click any trading pair or trading card within the content to complete a transaction. The top 10 users by trading volume will win GT, Gate merchandise boxes, position experience vouchers, and more.
The top prize: 50 GT.
 has made “reducing the risks of Bitcoin” a condition for providing a loan of $1.4 billion, directly pressuring El Salvador to abandon its legal tender status. When voting in parliament, 71% of the public clearly opposed this policy, which had been forcibly implemented.
The EU also plans to list El Salvador as a high-risk country under the guise of “anti-money laundering.” Under internal and external pressure, El Salvador was ultimately forced to announce the repeal of Bitcoin's legal tender status in January 2025, bringing this “financial experiment” to an end as the national economy teetered on the brink of collapse.
El Salvador's legislature has repealed the Bitcoin legal tender law and agreed to stop using public funds to purchase additional Bitcoin, as part of a $1.4 billion loan agreement reached with the International Monetary Fund in January.
The letter of intent included in the International Monetary Fund report was signed by Salvadoran financial officials, confirming that the country's Bitcoin balance has not increased. Source: International Monetary Fund
The government also agreed to reduce support for the Chivo Bitcoin wallet, which has limited use among residents of the country.
The International Monetary Fund released a report in July revealing that El Salvador has not purchased any new Bitcoin since signing a $1.4 billion loan agreement in December 2024, which has caused a stir in the crypto community.
Strategic Shift: From Fiat Currency to Strategic Reserves
Despite canceling Bitcoin's status as legal tender, El Salvador has not completely abandoned its Bitcoin strategy. The country continues to accumulate Bitcoin reserves, currently holding 6,313 coins worth over $702 million.
The government has also passed a new banking law that allows BTC investment banks to provide services to accredited investors. By 2025, 80,000 civil servants have received Bitcoin certification, and El Salvador has hosted several public Bitcoin and artificial intelligence education programs.
In August 2025, El Salvador even conducted a “quantum migration,” transferring the country's Bitcoin reserves of $680 million from a single address to 14 decentralized, new blockchain addresses to enhance the security and long-term custody of the national strategic Bitcoin reserves.
Economy and Livelihood: The Real Cost Behind the Experiment
El Salvador's Bitcoin experiment has placed a heavy burden on this economically weak country. According to World Bank data, in 2023, the central government's debt in El Salvador accounted for 101.7% of GDP, and the volatility of Bitcoin prices has directly exacerbated the debt crisis.
Moody's has downgraded its sovereign credit rating to Caa3, nearing default. This money could have been used to repair roads and build schools, but now it has all been wasted on these nonsensical things.
The lives of ordinary people have not improved; merchants immediately convert Bitcoin into US dollars, or else they risk losing money if prices drop. In February 2025, El Salvador was forced to announce the abolition of Bitcoin's legal tender status, and this “financial experiment” ended with the national economy on the brink of collapse.
Geopolitical Game: The Dilemma of Small Countries in the Games of Great Powers
Behind El Salvador's Bitcoin experiment lies deeper geopolitical factors. The United States sees China's financial system becoming stronger, the internationalization of the Renminbi is evident, and their trade and cross-border payment capabilities are also increasing, which of course makes them uncomfortable.
The U.S. is trying to regulate stablecoins through legislation, creating a closed loop of “Dollar - Stablecoin - U.S. Treasury Bonds,” aiming to incorporate Bitcoin into its own system. The “Genius Act” passed by the U.S. House of Representatives in 2025 requires stablecoin issuers to hold 100% of their reserves in U.S. dollars or Treasury bonds.
El Salvador initially jumped in, probably thinking it could bypass the control of the US dollar with Bitcoin, but instead became a test subject for American capital. In 2023, El Salvador's external debt accounted for over 80% of GDP, and much of that debt was borrowed against collateralized Bitcoin. When the price drops, additional collateral must be provided, leaving the national finances gasping for breath.
Future Outlook: Reflections on Digital Currency and National Sovereignty
El Salvador's experiments are not all failures. There are still over 100 merchants in Berlin accepting Bitcoin, Turkish companies have invested $1.6 billion in the ports surrounding “Bitcoin City”, and El Salvador has even become the first country to issue tokenized U.S. Treasury bonds.
Buckle candidly stated in an interview: “It didn't meet expectations, but it brought us branding and investment.” Nowadays, although Bitcoin is no longer fiat currency, it continues to exist in a more market-oriented way - businesses can choose whether to accept it, while the government shifts its focus to improving the regulatory framework.
The reflection that this experiment leaves for the world is far from over. Can digital currency truly make finance accessible to all? How can national sovereign currencies coexist with decentralized assets? In the current global absence of cryptocurrency regulation, are the adventures of small countries innovations or gambles?
The Bitcoin office of El Salvador announced on “Bitcoin Day” in September 2025 that they have acquired an additional 21 bitcoins. President Bukele emphasized on social media that the country's Bitcoin reserves have reached 6313.18 bitcoins, with a market value of approximately 701 million USD.
This number seems to tell the story of a small country’s stubborn insistence on financial autonomy. On the streets of El Salvador, Bitcoin ATMs still stand there, but few people show interest.
The four-year Bitcoin experiment brought international reputation and profound lessons to this country, and President Booker highlighted the key point with a statement: “It didn’t meet expectations, but it brought us branding and investment.”