The govt may not be considering Bitcoin, or it may be, I have a feeling the state crypto talk is a bit of a smokescreen.
Right, sanctioned countries often talk about launching their own crypto to allegedly circumvent sanctions, but Venezuela's example clearly shows that it can't work - other countries are not accepting new state-owned coin, traders don't buy it and countries that impose sanctions quickly prohibit any deals with those new coins for their citizens.
I´m not sure if the Petro issued by Venezuela is really a great example. After all
they completely botched the launch when it wasn´t even clear to potential users whether the Petro
was based on Ethereum or on NEM. Maybe the Petro would have seen more
acceptance by other countries if the launch wouldn´t have been such a train wreck.
Imagine if a country like Russia issues an own cryptocurrency and launches it
after really making sure that the project is solid. Let´s imagine they give other countries
a discount initially when they pay for oil or gas using the new cryptocurrency. A cryptocurrency
launched in a matter like this would be a giant success. Venezuela just managed to
make too many mistakes in the way they launched the Petro.
I wouldn´t rule out a successful state-owned cryptocurrency just yet
after the failure of the Petro.