Decoding Argentina: The Everyday Life of the Web3 Silent Superpower, Where Stablecoins Are a Necessity for Survival
In Argentina, Crypto and Stablecoins are not just part of the tech narrative, but essential financial infrastructure for everyday people's survival.
Original Author: Laughing, KITE AI
I have been in Argentina for almost two weeks to attend Devconnet. Argentina is the furthest country from China, and this event has attracted fewer attendees, mostly developers and builders. I hope this article can help bridge some information gaps.
Let's start by talking about some counterintuitive phenomena observed here:
· Argentina has the highest stablecoin adoption rate globally, and the Western Hemisphere has the highest crypto penetration rate
· In major cities, almost all stores (restaurants, cafes, supermarkets, taxis) accept payment via Mercado Pago QR codes using USDC
· There are over 6,000 underground OTC shops on the streets operating U exchange businesses, with revenues higher than banks
· Argentina is a hidden Web3 superpower: in 2025, it contributed 4-6% of the Ethereum GitHub codebase (ranking first among non-English-speaking countries), and about 1/4 of the core infrastructure in the global Ethereum ecosystem has Argentine genes
Let's delve into the details below
1. In Argentina, Crypto has transitioned from "speculation" to "everyday infrastructure"
Argentina has become a textbook example of global cryptocurrency adoption, unlike the Asian and Western markets primarily driven by speculation, the driving force here is pragmatism.
As mentioned earlier, Argentina has the highest cryptocurrency penetration rate in the Western Hemisphere (around 22.8%), and the stablecoin adoption rate is as high as 61.8% (the highest globally).
Around 5 million people use crypto assets in their daily lives, with this proportion reaching 25-30% among the 18-35 age group. For many post-00s, a crypto wallet is their "primary bank account," rather than a traditional bank.
Crypto payments in Argentina have seamlessly landed in the mainstream. In major cities, almost all offline consumption supports QR code payments.
Merchants do not directly accept U; instead, they leverage Mercado Pago (Argentina's equivalent of Alipay) interoperability standards:
Users use wallets like Lemon, Belo, etc., to scan the merchant's fiat QR code, and the backend automatically completes the process of "on-chain USDC → bridged to local payment gateway → exchanged to pesos → merchant receives payment."
This off-ramp experience is extremely smooth and fully compliant.
2. The Most Profitable Crypto Business is the Street-side Fiat-Crypto Exchange Hole-in-the-Wall Store
In Buenos Aires, small shops with signs saying "Buy USDT, cash payment" (commonly known as cuevas) can be seen everywhere on the streets, with city-wide estimates suggesting there are approximately 4,000-6,000 such shops by 2025.
During peak times, a single store can generate daily revenues of $10,000-$20,000, with profit margins ranging from 5-8%. Many of these shops earn annual net profits surpassing those of traditional bank branches.
Essentially, they serve as offline P2P intermediaries, helping ordinary people bypass the official $200 monthly limit and 60% tax, making them the most resilient and profitable sector of Argentina's crypto ecosystem.
3. Argentina is the Hidden Web3 Superpower
Most of the robust infrastructure in the Ethereum ecosystem (such as OpenZeppelin, Hardhat, Decentraland, POAP, etc.) is created by Argentinians.
By 2025, they contributed 4-6% of the Ethereum GitHub codebase (ranking first among non-English-speaking countries).
Around 20,000-30,000 out of 150,000 developers nationwide are focused on Web3 (ranking first in Latin America), with key contributors from Argentina present in top protocols like Lido, Uniswap, Aave, Chainlink, among others.
During an interview with Infobae at Devcon, Vitalik said, "Since 2021, I have visited Argentina almost every year. It has one of the largest and most active crypto communities globally."
Argentina is also one of the world's largest exporters of remote workers (consistently top three on Upwork/Fiverr), with developer salaries only one-third of those in the U.S., yet maintaining top-quality work, English proficiency, and favorable time zones.
Why Are Argentinians So Enthusiastic About Crypto?
Despite inflation dropping from 211% to 31.3% since Milei took the stage, why has the enthusiasm for crypto among Argentinians continued to rise?
From a local perspective:
· 30% annual inflation is catastrophic anywhere in the world;
· The peso continues to devalue, with the feeling of "a new price every day" remaining constant;
· Capital controls have only been mildly relaxed in certain aspects, far from true free conversion.
For them:
Crypto is no longer a question of "whether to invest" but rather a question of "how to lock their money for daily expenses into something that won't depreciate."
Final Thoughts:
In Argentina, Crypto and Stablecoins are not a tech narrative, but the financial infrastructure on which ordinary people rely for survival.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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