MEXICO CITY—Mexico might soon become the next country to follow El Salvador’s footsteps and grant Bitcoin legal tender status in its jurisdiction.
A Mexican senator plans to propose a crypto law to the Mexican Congress this year, one that is based on El Salvador’s Bitcoin Law, according to TokenPost.
Indira Kempis, a senator representing Nuevo León state, is convinced that Mexico should grant Bitcoin legal tender status as adopting the crypto could potentially drive global financial inclusion, TokenPost said.
“It is clear to me that financial exclusion is one of the public problems that few of us have addressed with feasible alternatives, and that this type of technology is allowing us to generate an alternative, a path, a solution so that millions of people can be included in the financial system,” the senator was quoted as saying.
Bitcoin adoption has changed the perception of the global community towards El Salvador as they are now focused on the newly opened opportunities brought by the move, TokenPost noted.
“It is a historic opportunity that this type of project is being carried out in a Central American country,” the senator added.
Don’t Forget to Check the Spam Folder!
Don’t forget to check your Spam/Junk email folder if you didn’t receive your free, popular and daily CUToday.info news headlines on Monday.
And if you haven’t yet signed up for the new email solution on which CUToday.info has partnered with ResponseGenius, you can do so here. Signing up requires less than one minute of your time.
CUToday.info has received very positive response from readers following the move to an improved provider of the daily headlines, but many also noted they did need to go to their Spam/Junk folder and need to mark it as safe.
The new email solution has not only improved every reader’s delivery experience, but it also features a fresh, new format that is easy to read, especially on mobile devices.
Please note and/or make your IT department or email administrator aware the emails will be coming from the domains CUTodayinfo.com and CUTodayinfoReply.com.
