Bank of Mexico Governor Alejandro Diaz de
Leon's comments suggest Mexico will not be following El Salvador any time soon
in adopting the digital currency as parallel legal tender.
"Whoever receives Bitcoin in exchange for
a good or service, we believe that (transaction) is more akin to bartering
because that person is exchanging a good for a good, but not really money for a
good," said Diaz de Leon.
"In our times, money has evolved to be
fiat money issued by central banks," he said. "Bitcoin is more like a
dimension of precious metals than daily legal tender."
The Banxico boss argued that in order for a
cryptocurrency to be considered money it must be a reliable payment method. He
added that Bitcoin would also need to safeguard its value.
Diaz de Leon pointed out that the value of
cryptocurrencies have often swung wildly in a single day.
"People will not want their purchasing
power, their salary to go up or down 10 percent from one day to another. You
don't want that volatility for purchasing power. In that sense, it is not a
good safeguard of value," he said.
The unprecedented adoption of Bitcoin earlier
this week as legal tender by El Salvador has been beset by problems that have
contributed to a rout in the value of the digital currency globally.
Bitcoin has been notoriously volatile. In
April it rose to over $64,000 and fell almost as low as $30,000 in May.
It last traded up 2.44 percent at $47,179.04.
© Reuters
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