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El Salvador president calls US economist “boomer” for criticizing the bitcoin law.

El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele predicted that Bitcoin will ultimately see a "gigantic price increase" due to its limite
El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele predicted that Bitcoin will ultimately see a “gigantic price increase” due to its limited supply of only 21 million digital coins.

The Central American nation El Salvador is all set to bring Bitcoin Law into effect from September 7. The Latin American country created history on June 9 after Congress approved Bitcoin as an optional legal tender. The bold decision was met with criticism from the likes of IMF, World Bank, and several other rating agencies. The latest to join the list is Steve Hanke, an economist at John Hopkins University.

El Salvador’s President calls Hanke “boomer.”

Hanke had criticized El Salvador President Nayib Bukele for continuing with his Bitcoin implementation plan, claiming the President is “playing with fire” that might burn El Salvador. He said, “The StateDept sanctioned 14 El Salvadoran govt officials, WorldBank & IMF issued warnings, & ELSL’s bonds tanked. But Pres. Nayib Bukele has ignored these red flags & marches on with his crackpot Bitcoin Law. Bukele is playing with fire. ELSL will be burnt.” El Salvador’s President Bukele responded to the economist’s tweet, calling him a “boomer.” President Bukele has faced a lot of criticism from around the world as well as from within the state.

El Salvador continues to draw criticism for its bitcoin law.

The opposition party in the country had earlier filed a lawsuit to halt the Bitcoin law implementation citing economic imbalance. The warnings from global financial global regulators such as IMF and WorldBank were mainly regarding the ill effect of Bitcoin’s volatility on the lenders and the financial market. However, President Bukele has maintained throughout that the Bitcoin Law is no sham and hasn’t been passed just for the sake of the international press. Bukele believes BTC can solve El Salvador’s banking crisis where more than 70% of the population is unbanked.

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