4.4 Emerging-Market Dollarization
Why millions in Argentina, Nigeria, and Turkey use stablecoins to protect savings from triple-digit inflation, how P2P networks enable dollar access without banks, and the economic sovereignty challenges this creates for governments.
When inflation hits triple digits and your savings lose half their value in months, people get creative. Across Argentina, Nigeria, Turkey, and Southeast Asia, millions are turning to dollar-backed stablecoins as a financial lifeline. Unlike crypto speculation, this is about survival—preserving savings, sending money home, and conducting business when local currencies fail.
Why People Turn to Stablecoins
Imagine waking up to find that yesterday's grocery money now buys half as much food. In Argentina, prices doubled in 2024 1. In Nigeria, removing fuel subsidies caused costs to jump five-fold overnight 2. Turkish families watched their currency lose 97% of its value over 16 years 3.
In these conditions, holding local currency becomes a losing game. A shop owner in Buenos Aires explained it simply: "I convert my daily earnings to USDT before closing. By morning, the peso price has changed, but my dollars are still dollars" 4.
The numbers tell the story:
- Argentina: 6 out of 10 crypto transactions involve stablecoins, far above the global average 5
- Nigeria: 1 in 8 people actively use stablecoins—the highest rate globally 6
- Turkey: Monthly crypto trading volume reached $95 billion, with most seeking dollar stability 7
How It Works on the Ground
P2P Networks (peer-to-peer trading) Instead of using banks, people trade directly with each other through apps like Binance P2P or local platforms. A seller posts their stablecoins for sale, buyers pay with local currency through mobile money or bank transfer, and the platform holds funds until both sides confirm 8. Think of it like a digital marketplace where people exchange currencies, but operating 24/7.
The "Crypto Caves" of Buenos Aires In rented apartments across the city, informal exchanges help people convert cash to stablecoins. Operating through WhatsApp groups, these services charge 2-3% fees but offer better rates than official exchanges 9. One former cab driver now runs such an operation, helping neighbors protect their savings.
Mobile Money Integration In Nigeria and Kenya, stablecoins connect with popular mobile payment apps. A farmer can receive USDT from a buyer abroad, then convert it to local currency through the same app they use for daily purchases 10. No bank account needed.
Real People, Real Impact
Maria, Freelance Designer in Argentina Earns $800 monthly from international clients, paid in USDC. Keeps most in stablecoins, converting only what's needed for expenses. "Before, I lost 20% to inflation every month. Now I can actually save" 4.
Ahmed, Nigerian Food Importer When banks stopped providing dollars for imports, his business nearly collapsed. Now uses stablecoins to pay suppliers in China. "What took weeks through banks happens in minutes. My business survived because of this" 11.
Elif, Turkish Online Seller Accepts payment in USDT from international customers. "With the lira so unstable, pricing in local currency meant changing prices daily. Stablecoins solved this" 12.
The Remittance Revolution
Traditional money transfers charge high fees and take days. Sending $200 from the U.S. to Nigeria costs about $14 through Western Union and takes 3-5 days. With stablecoins, the same transfer costs under $3 and arrives in minutes 13.
For the $650 billion sent home by workers globally each year 14, these savings matter:
- Traditional route: 6.2% average fee globally, up to 8% to Africa 11
- Stablecoin route: 0.5-3% total cost 13
- Potential savings: $40 billion annually for families worldwide 13
Government Responses
Authorities face a dilemma: stablecoins help citizens but weaken government control over money. Responses vary:
Singapore: Embraces innovation with clear rules. Licensed stablecoins must back every dollar with real assets and allow redemption within 5 days 15.
Turkey: Tightened controls with prison sentences for unlicensed exchanges and daily transaction limits, yet usage continues growing 16.
Nigeria: After initially banning crypto banking, reversed course in 2023. Now developing licensing frameworks while closely monitoring for currency manipulation 17.
Argentina: Allows legal crypto use despite banking restrictions. Some provinces even accept tax payments in stablecoins 18.
Most governments are also developing their own digital currencies (CBDCs) as alternatives, though adoption remains minimal compared to stablecoins 19.
The Inclusion Paradox
Stablecoins promise financial access for the unbanked, and in many ways deliver. Someone without a bank account can receive remittances, save money, and transact globally with just a smartphone. In Sub-Saharan Africa, where only half of adults have bank accounts 20, crypto adoption leads globally 11.
Yet challenges remain:
- Technical barriers: Understanding wallets, keys, and security
- Scam risks: Especially high in informal P2P networks
- Volatility: Even stablecoins can temporarily lose their dollar peg
- Regulatory uncertainty: Rules can change overnight
The deeper concern for governments: as citizens adopt foreign-currency stablecoins, central banks lose tools to manage their economies. When people flee to dollars during crisis, it becomes harder to stabilize the local currency—creating a self-reinforcing cycle 21.
Looking Ahead
For millions facing currency devaluation, stablecoins aren't perfect—but they're better than watching savings evaporate. As one Nigerian user put it: "It's not about getting rich with crypto. It's about not getting poor with naira" 22.
The technology continues evolving, costs keep dropping, and adoption accelerates. Governments must now decide: fight this tide or find ways to protect citizens while maintaining some monetary control. The answer will shape how money works for billions in emerging markets.
- Argentina sees 60% of crypto transactions in stablecoins; Nigeria has 1 in 8 people actively using them for daily needs
- P2P networks and mobile money integration enable access without traditional banking relationships
- Remittance costs drop from 6.2% average globally to 0.5-3% via stablecoins, saving families $40 billion annually
- Governments face a dilemma: stablecoins help citizens survive inflation but weaken monetary policy control
- The "crypto caves" of Buenos Aires and similar informal networks charge 2-3% fees but provide better rates than official exchanges