

US President Donald Trump wants to make his country a “Bitcoin
superpower,” but the question remains as to who he is competing
against.
Speaking at
Blockwork’s Digital Asset Summit on March 20 to a crowd of
crypto industry executives and observers, he said, “Together we
will make America the undisputed Bitcoin superpower and the crypto
capital of the world.”
The US crypto industry has benefited greatly from preferential
executive orders from Trump’s White House, including the
establishment of a “strategic Bitcoin reserve” — a move advocates
regard as a key metric for Bitcoin adoption.
However, many other countries, including major US trade
partners, are just not ready to take on Bitcoin as a reserve asset,
begging the question of who the US is competing against to become a
“Bitcoin superpower.”
US allies, trade partners and rivals aren’t competing on
Bitcoin
Compared to major trade partners and geopolitical rivals, the US
is certainly far ahead of the game in terms of Bitcoin adoption.
Neither the European Union, China, Mexico or Canada have taken such
drastic steps toward institutionalizing the asset.
China, the US’ largest trade partner by far and also its most
prominent geopolitical opponent, has taken a strong stance against
the asset, initially banning it outright before softening its
approach slightly. China now allows mining operations but strictly
prohibits the use of Bitcoin.
Overall, the government has preferred to concentrate its efforts
on developing a retail central bank digital currency in the form of
the digital yuan.
The European Union, another major US trade partner, passed its
Markets in Crypto-Assets regulatory framework in May 2023, which
came into full implementation by member states at the end of
2024.
While the EU is ahead of the US in terms of passing concrete
legislation, it offers far less preferential terms to the industry
than those expected in the US’ parallel legislation currently
circulating in Congress.
Crypto user penetration in the EU is expected to remain
essentially stagnant this year, and cryptocurrency’s popularity is
low overall among the union’s richest economies. No member state
has a Bitcoin reserve.
Even in crypto-friendly Switzerland, which saw $52.4 billion in
US service exports in 2024, there are limits to crypto endorsement
and adoption. On March 1, Swiss National Bank President Martin
Schlegel said Bitcoin wasn’t suitable as a reserve asset, citing
stability, liquidity concerns and security risks.
Germany’s central bank chief Joachim Nagel has also dismissed
the idea of a Bitcoin reserve, while Canadian Prime Minister Mark
Carney has previously criticized Bitcoin as being a poor form of
money.
Related: What Canada’s new Liberal PM Mark Carney means for
crypto
South Korea doesn’t feel ready to hold Bitcoin as a reserve
asset, with the Bank of Korea stating that BTC is volatile and does
not meet International Monetary Fund standards.
Russia, for its part, has allowed crypto to be used in
international settlements to circumvent sanctions. The central bank
is also preparing a three-year experiment to allow select investors
to trade crypto. Some legal scholars in the country have suggested
establishing a crypto fund consisting of assets seized in criminal
proceedings, although the Duma has yet to form one.
Critics and proponents lambast “Strategic Bitcoin
Reserve”
Critics have questioned the strategic value of the US Bitcoin
reserve and who it benefits in the long run.
Cornell economic professor Eswar Prasad said, “This is neither a
strategic nor sensible idea but instead benefits bitcoin holders
while sticking US taxpayers with the bill and exposing the
government to financial risks. The US government would become a key
driver of bitcoin’s price on the way up and down.”
As noted by TLDR News, the point of most strategic reserves is
to stock commodities that are deemed critically important to the
function of a country’s economy. Governments can also create them
to stabilize the price of goods that are in high demand. The US has
strategic reserves of oil and grain, while China even has a
strategic pork stockpile.
The Bitcoin strategic reserve does neither of these, as there is
no great demand among Americans for Bitcoin, and Bitcoiners
certainly don’t want the price to remain stable.
George Selgin, a senior fellow and director emeritus at the Cato
Institute’s Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives, said
that the reserve’s stated goal of helping pay off US national debt
was unrealistic.
“The plan’s million-coin stash would have to more than double in
value during its 20-year holding period just to compensate for the
plan’s implicit interest cost. Second, the stockpile must
eventually be sold to realize the gains, and you can bet that the
same bitcoin holders who have managed to get the government to keep
the bitcoin it already has will cry foul if it ever tries to sell
any new coins it acquires,” he stated.
Claims of it serving as a digital Fort Knox are “just as
dubious” he said, as the gold contained therein hasn’t propped up
the value of the dollar since Richard Nixon was president, taking
the dollar off of the gold standard.
Even Bitcoiners have taken a crack at the reserve. Charles
Edwards, founder of Bitcoin and digital asset hedge fund Capriole
Investments, criticized the “hold only” policy of the reserve,
calling it “disappointing” and a “pig in lipstick.”
Source: Charles
Edwards
The reserve even proved to be something of a non-starter for
Bitcoin price, with price action remaining relatively stable after
Trump signed the executive order on March 6.
As it stands, the US is leading a race that no one else is
running. But things could change quickly. Right-wing parties
sympathetic to the creation of Bitcoin reserves have
been on the
rise in European elections.
Brazil, a major economy in the Western hemisphere, has also been
weighing the
possibility of a Bitcoin reserve.
Furthermore, the US Bitcoin reserve allows the Treasury to
purchase Bitcoin so long as it can do so in a budget-neutral manner
that doesn’t come at a cost to taxpayers. The full effect of the
reserve, and its influence on Bitcoin adoption, may yet be
felt.
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