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I told at the same article without needing..., there are no official numbers, it's based in my experience. I know also other countries can buy since their bank but I explained in the article:
My reality, as a Paraguayan consumer, is this: banks don’t want to modernize or integrate crypto-related activity. The irony is that Paraguay’s Central Bank has already brushed up against the topic through legislative updates I mentioned in another issue, as well as the Binding Consultation 582 from the Tax Authority, which allows for proper invoicing if crypto is exchanged and one wants to generate an accounting event, as accountants would say. But now it’s the banks, hiding behind “internal policies,” who are hunting down anyone who uses crypto—even though, behind closed doors, they themselves admit to using Bitcoin, USDT, and others.
If you buy any crypto-related with p2p and you put something tiny suspicious about bitcoin/crypto in the bank details, they can even close your account. That's why Paraguay is full p2p, because banks (not the central bank) forbids any activity. The hunt is real.
I have done a lots of p2p transactions, no one write anything about BTC on the bank transfer concept.
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no one write anything about BTC on the bank transfer concept.
Yes, they do. That's why I made the whole post. That's why I told you two times the hunt is real.
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