Bolivia's Central Bank Bans Bitcoin

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Jun 19, 2014 at 19:30 UTCUpdated Jun 20, 2014 at 11:58 UTC. El Banco Central de Bolivia, the central bank of the South American nation, has officially banned any currency or coins not issued or regulated by the government, including bitcoin and a list of other cryptocurrencies including namecoin, peercoin, Quark, primecoin and feathercoin.

The official policy, launched on 6th May, has recently surfaced to garner coverage from Spanish-language news source PanAm Post, and is the first announcement by the country's central bank on the subject of digital currency according to research from the US Law Library of Congress.

The bank went on to say that citizens are prohibited from denominating prices in any currency that is not previously approved by its national institutions.

The document states, is necessary to protect the boliviano, the country's national currency, and to safeguard users from the kind of uncontrolled currencies that can lead to the users losing their money.

The decision to fully ban bitcoin puts Bolivia in unique standing in the international community, as other nations previously believed to be embracing restrictive policies - including China, Thailand and Russia - have since backed away from implementing similar measures.

Earlier this March, a report suggested that The Superintendencia Financiera de Colombia, Colombia's central bank, may have been seeking to implement a bitcoin ban.

Elsewhere in South America, central banks in Argentina and Brazil are permissive to digital currencies, according to analysis from BitLegal.

Notable members of South America's bitcoin community had varying reactions to the news.

Others such as Sebastian Serrano, CEO of Argentina bitcoin merchant processor BitPagos, lamented the fact that such an announcement will do little to encourage the local startup community and prohibit bitcoin from helping those in the country who could benefit from economic freedom.

He added: "Hopefully, Bolivia will revert its decision in the future as bitcoin continues to prosper in the rest of the world."

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