Bolivia’s president-elect Rodrigo Paz is preparing to embed blockchain infrastructure into the machinery of the state as a core instrument against corruption. The incoming administration, which secured power with a mid-fifties share of the vote against Jorge Quiroga, will assume office in early November amid an economy strained by fuel scarcity and dollar liquidity pressure. Paz has signaled that the new government intends to use distributed ledgers and smart-contract tooling to hard-lock the terms of public procurement, with the intent of preventing discretionary alteration of state contracts once published.
The reform blueprint sets blockchain not as a symbolic modernization step but as a structural enforcement mechanism for public integrity. Systems would be engineered so that bids, awards, milestones and payment schedules are tamper-evident and machine-auditable, reducing opportunities for back-room renegotiation and rent extraction in public works and supply contracts.
Crypto Assets to Be Integrated Into Reserve Strategy
Alongside procurement reform, Paz is planning a channel through which citizens may declare crypto holdings into a new foreign-exchange stabilization vehicle. The design seeks to widen the national reserve base by incorporating tokenized assets under a regulatory envelope without granting legal-tender status to Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies. The policy is framed as a pragmatic use of digital assets as financial instruments rather than an ideological currency overhaul.
This reserve-side measure is intended to absorb part of the country’s crypto float into a transparent framework, lowering frictions between private holdings and state balance-sheet objectives. The approach would allow Bolivia to diversify reserves during a period of dollar constraint while also formalizing digital wealth that currently sits outside official statistics.
Rapid Normalization of Crypto Infrastructure in Bolivia
The Paz proposals build on a year of accelerated normalization around digital assets inside Bolivia. In 2024, the central bank removed its prohibition on crypto transactions and opened the door to regulated trading. Commercial institutions began to follow, including a bank that rolled out custody for USDT and global retail brands that started accepting stablecoins for payments. Even the national oil company tested the use of crypto rails to facilitate imports.
The country has also moved on the diplomacy and standards front. Bolivia executed a memorandum with El Salvador positioning crypto rails as a dependable modernization path for payments and settlement in emerging economies. Officials involved in that engagement described digital assets as a credible alternative layer for international transactions rather than a speculative sideline.
Potential Template for Emerging Markets
If implemented, the Paz architecture would make Bolivia one of the most assertive adopters of blockchain for governance in Latin America. Observers note that the agenda aims to attack two parallel crises — institutional trust and monetary pressure — with the same stack of digital infrastructure. The bet is that verifiable procurement can help rebuild legitimacy, while a regulated path for crypto reserves can cushion external imbalances without resorting to radical currency experiments.
Analysts argue that a successful rollout could position Bolivia as a reference case for peer economies seeking to combine anti-corruption enforcement with financial stabilization through tokenized instruments. The incoming administration is expected to begin translating these policy signals into enabling decrees and implementation roadmaps once in office in November.








