In simple terms, <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/money/2022/03/24/five-tips-to-beat-the-rising-costs-of-inflation/" target="_blank">inflation is a general increase in prices</a> and a subsequent fall in the purchasing power of money. Even modest inflation is a difficult situation for any country and its people to tackle, especially when <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/uae/2022/05/29/what-uae-families-can-do-to-keep-down-the-cost-of-living/" target="_blank">wage growth is not keeping pace with rising prices</a>. However, <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/economy/2022/05/24/hyperinflation-in-lebanon-hovers-at-206-in-april/" target="_blank">hyperinflation</a>, which occurs when inflation exceeds 50 per cent, is devastating for citizens of affected countries. Like a war or a terrorist attack in a distant land, hyperinflation is often seen as a vague and obscure threat. While we wince at the thought of it, watch with morbid curiosity as it unfolds and feel empathy for those suffering, we remain relatively indifferent to the threat of hyperinflation until it reaches our doorstep. But hyperinflation has been steadily gaining momentum in developing countries for decades. In these places, rapid currency devaluation has led to political instability. Many citizens in these countries have <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/money/2022/07/18/uae-investors-will-soon-be-able-to-trade-cryptocurrencies-in-dirhams/" target="_blank">turned to cryptocurrency</a> as a lifeline for the purchase of essential goods, to store wealth or to protect their purchasing power. Venezuela has recorded uninterrupted inflation rates between a modest 6.3 per cent and a mind-boggling 130,060.2 per cent over the past 40 years. More recently, it has gone through one of the world’s most prolonged bouts of hyperinflation, which lasted four years, driven by socioeconomic and political issues. The socialist government, led by President Nicolas Maduro, only recently stopped printing money after the widespread adoption of the US dollar as the preferred currency. Reactive cryptocurrency adoption has been ubiquitous in Venezuela since its inflationary meltdown. Cryptocurrency is now seen by many observers as the saviour of the Venezuelan economy, as it allows people to engage in peer-to-peer trading and to use it as a form of payment. The government has even created the Decentralised Stock Exchange of Venezuela, where fiat currencies and digital assets can be traded. Uncertainty holds the high throne during an economic crisis, especially in a country such as Lebanon, where inflation has paralysed the economy and is now running at 210 per cent. Trust in the Lebanese pound has vanished. As citizens turned to the US dollar as an alternative, banks started increasing the exchange rate between the greenback and the Lebanese pound. This directive led to many Lebanese — from politicians to media personalities to taxi drivers — to stash their savings in digital money to shield themselves from currency depreciation. For the Lebanese, digital currencies are now even more tangible than the US dollar in their bank accounts. Most transactions taking place in Lebanon’s cryptocurrency communities are between a few hundred and a few thousand dollars’ worth of stablecoins such as USDT and USDC, the value of which hovers at about $1 per unit. These digital dollars can be traded for other cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin or Ether. The adoption of cryptocurrency has proven to be a lifeline in developing economies, where rapidly devaluing currencies and political instability have offered citizens few options. In these places, the attraction of an entirely decentralised financial system untethered to a government or the economy is clear. People in these regions have gained more control over their money through the use of cryptocurrency, while access to capital has become easier. Cryptocurrency and decentralised finance specifically do not have the same high barriers to entry that plague the traditional financial system. Anyone with an internet connection is able to participate. Financial inclusion has long been one of the hard sells of cryptocurrency and today, we see that coming to fruition in developing countries around the world. This does not mean that cryptocurrency is the answer to all economic woes, however. Compared to stable currencies such as the US dollar, euro, British pound and Japanese yen, even US dollar-backed stablecoins present a high level of risk. This makes cryptocurrency less attractive inside stable economies. But what cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology offer any economy is a level of objectivity — and this will become increasingly attractive, even in developed countries. Cryptocurrency is politically agnostic. It allows the citizen of any country to participate in finance and preserve and grow their wealth, and it even allows them to make basic purchases through card payment providers and peer-to-peer systems. We are, no doubt, in a period of growing pains for this nascent asset class. However, its possibilities and potential benefits are becoming more evident, while usage is growing every day. <i>Stefan Rust is the founder of Laguna Labs, a blockchain development house, and former chief executive of </i><a href="http://bitcoin.com/" target="_blank"><i>bitcoin.com</i></a>