Pakistan has moved closer to tapping El Salvador’s Bitcoin playbook. In San Salvador this week, Bilal Bin Saqib, CEO of the Pakistan Crypto Council and special assistant to Pakistan’s prime minister on crypto and blockchain, met with El Salvador Nayib Bukele.
They signed a Letter of Intent to share know‑how on public‑sector Bitcoin use, blockchain‑driven financial inclusion and policy design for markets still finding their footing.
According to reports, the agreement establishes a formal connection between El Salvador’s Bitcoin Office and the Pakistan Crypto Council. Its objective is to advise Islamabad while it formalizes regulations regarding the adoption of cryptocurrency.
Pakistan is already subject to a $7 billion IMF loan program to 2027. Now it wishes to learn from the mistakes Bukele made when he legalized crypto as legal tender in September 2021, while facing opposition from the International Monetary Fund regarding fiscal risks.
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According to IMF statements, the fund rejected Pakistan’s bid to offer subsidized power to energy‑intensive industries, including Bitcoin miners.
That plan would have tapped up to 2,000 megawatts of seasonal electricity surplus—mainly in winter months—to run mining rigs and AI data centers.
The IMF warned that special pricing schemes risked skewing Pakistan’s energy market and undermining fiscal balance. If Islamabad presses ahead without IMF buy‑in, it could trigger fresh delays in loan disbursements.
Pakistan’s delegation also held a virtual meeting with Michael Saylor, whose firm Strategy holds more than $62 billion in crypto reserves. Saylor shared insights on managing a large‑scale BTC portfolio and using digital assets as an institutional treasury tool.
Pakistan hopes to learn how to build its own “Strategic Bitcoin Reserve” without exposing public finances to wild price swings.
El Salvador now holds over 6,240 BTC, valued at about $740 million, according to BitcoinTreasuries.NET. Bukele’s team has bought more than 3,000 BTC since rolling out its Bitcoin Law, even as critics pointed to market volatility and operational hurdles.
Saqib hailed Bukele as “one of the most extraordinary visionary leaders of our time,” noting that conviction mattered more than deep pockets when staking a country’s reputation on digital currency.
Based on reports, Pakistan plans to dispatch technical teams to El Salvador later this year. They will study Bukele’s tax framework for Bitcoin gains, the setup of the country’s Bitcoin trust and pilot projects that tap blockchain for government payments.
Featured image from Shutterstock, chart from TradingView
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