Bermuda, the small island nation with huge crypto ambitions
The government recently announced it would become the world’s first economy to go fully onchain, a move officials believe will bring its people new opportunities.
What to know:
- Bermuda is working with Circle, Coinbase and Stellar to build what it hopes will be the world’s first fully onchain economy, including a sovereign Bermuda digital dollar.
- The Bermuda Monetary Authority has begun real-world testing by airdropping USDC to residents, enabling payments at a pop-up marketplace, and preparing to accept digital assets for government fees starting with the Department of Motor Vehicles.
- Regulators are updating laws on property, contracts and securities while piloting smart-contract-based compliance and an AI payments hub, aiming to make Bermuda a global center for tokenized assets and decentralized finance.
“We carried out a huge event in Bermuda to educate our citizens on how to set up their crypto wallet, and we airdropped $100 in Circle’s stablecoin USDC, and showed them how to use it for purchases, transfer or send it to friends and family or convert it and even offramp it into fiat if they chose to,” Swan said.
The experiment was designed to onboard local vendors and the public simultaneously, Swan added. Attendees were able to immediately test the ecosystem at an on-site marketplace, using their newly minted stablecoins to purchase goods, while payment processors like MoneyGram provided immediate conversion back into paper currency.
Driving demand at the DMV
While the pop-up marketplace served as a sandbox, the BMA and the government of Bermuda are already scaling the infrastructure to prepare it for the blockchain. The island nation has amended its legislation to officially accept digital assets for public taxes, starting with its highest-volume public sector.
