Over the past weeks the crypto market has been dominated by a deep sell-off, heavy liquidations and shrinking liquidity. Away from that noise, there is a strongOver the past weeks the crypto market has been dominated by a deep sell-off, heavy liquidations and shrinking liquidity. Away from that noise, there is a strong

Stablecoins Are Quietly Becoming Daily Money Across the Global South

2025/12/20 00:13

Over the past weeks the crypto market has been dominated by a deep sell-off, heavy liquidations and shrinking liquidity. Away from that noise, there is a strong trend that sees stablecoins becoming a common financial tool across large parts of the Global South. In places where inflation undermines salaries, where bank transfers are slow or unreliable, and where people depend on cross-border income, digital dollars have become a kind of quiet infrastructure.

The pattern shows up in every serious dataset. Chainalysis’ 2024 geography report found that Latin America accounts for some of the strongest stablecoin usage worldwide. Argentina remains one of the clearest examples. Even though inflation has recently fallen from triple-digit levels under the new government, Argentinians continue to rely on dollar-linked assets to preserve purchasing power and navigate capital controls. More than sixty percent of the country’s crypto transaction volume consists of stablecoins, a share mirrored in Brazil and Colombia. Across the region, people use digital dollars less as a speculative tool and more as a practical way to hold value and manage everyday expenses in unstable monetary environments.

Similar dynamics appear in Sub-Saharan Africa. Nigeria, despite recurring conflicts with regulators and exchange operators, repeatedly ranks near the top of global crypto adoption indices. Nigerian users receive billions of dollars worth of digital assets each year, and a significant part of that flow is stablecoin activity. Some of it represents informal remittances. Some of it reflects an attempt to escape the country’s fragmented exchange-rate system, where official and street prices for the naira often diverge. Digital dollars offer a more predictable reference point than bank rates that can shift overnight.

Across Southeast Asia the drivers are different but lead to the same result. Remittances are a primary use case. In markets such as the Philippines and Vietnam, large populations receive income from abroad. Conventional remittances remain expensive, often cutting deeply into wages sent home. Several studies, including those by the World Bank, put global remittance costs around four to seven percent for a typical transfer. Stablecoins have become a low-friction alternative. They travel quickly, often within minutes, and can be converted or spent locally through informal networks or crypto-to-goods platforms. For many families, the difference in fees is meaningful.

What ties these regions together is not a shared view of technology but a shared set of pressures. Inflation, currency controls, high remittance costs, unreliable banking and the need for cross-border resilience create a natural demand for a digital version of the dollar. Stablecoins fill that gap. They move over a range of networks, from older chains to faster and more scalable networks or newer Layer 2 rollups. The underlying assets may sit in regulated custodians in the United States or elsewhere, but the instruments themselves circulate freely and continuously.

At the consumer level, this shift is most evident in the kinds of purchases people make with digital dollars. In many markets, stablecoins are used to pay for everyday needs through intermediaries that convert crypto balances into practical goods and services. One such service, Netherlands-based Cryptorefills, offers access to a broad catalogue that includes more than 7,000 distinct gift card brands, alongside prepaid mobile credit, utility payments, eSIMs, as well as flight and hotel bookings across more than 300 airlines and over 1 million hotel properties worldwide. Because the platform spans multiple consumer categories and operates in more than 180 countries, its transactions offer a useful read on how people spend digital dollars in practice. The company reports that stablecoins account for a clear majority of purchases on its platform, with use of fast and scalable networks such as Solana and newer Layer 2 systems rising sharply. Although one dataset cannot represent the entire market, the mix of products and the geographic spread of customers make it a relevant indicator of how digital dollars circulate in day-to-day commerce.

The adoption is not uniform. In Europe and North America stablecoins appear more as an efficiency tool than a necessity. Fintech firms and payment providers test them for treasury operations, inter-company transfers and cross-border settlements. Some merchants experiment with on-chain invoicing or payouts. These developments matter, but they do not carry the urgency found in markets where the local currency struggles to hold value or where people depend on income from abroad.

There is also a growing policy debate. Analysts at Standard Chartered recently warned that widespread stablecoin use could draw deposits away from emerging-market banks. An estimate in one of their studies suggested that, under certain conditions, stablecoin savings in vulnerable economies could rise from the current base to more than a trillion dollars within a few years. Whether this plays out or not, it reflects the extent to which digital dollars have entered mainstream economic thinking in developing countries.

Yet for most users the reasoning is simpler. Stablecoins work predictably. They settle fast, cost little to send, and behave similarly across applications. People adopt them because they need a reliable unit of account and a way to move value without the usual frictions. From Buenos Aires to Lagos to Manila, this practicality matters more than ideology or speculation.

If the trend continues, the broader financial system will eventually have to adjust. For now, the rise of stablecoins across the Global South is less a technological revolution than a straightforward response to long-standing economic pressures. They have become a tool of everyday life, used quietly, without fanfare, by people trying to make their income last, pay their bills, or support their families abroad. In that sense the story is not about crypto at all. It is about how millions of people manage uncertainty, and how they build financial routines that work when the traditional ones do not.

Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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