Venezuela is suffering from hyperinflation, and the president recently devalued the country's currency by 95%.

Locals are turning to cryptocurrencies as a more stable store of value and means to transact.

Each month, 200 merchants are signing up to accept a cryptocurrency called dash in Venezuela, according to the Dash Core Group, and the rate of adoption is accelerating.

LONDON — A cryptocurrency called dash is seeing a surge in new merchant sign-ups and wallet downloads in Venezuela as hyperinflation in the country runs wild.

Venezuela is forecast to see inflation of as much as 1,000,000% this year, with locals needing stacks and stacks of cash just to buy food. Socialist President Nicolás Maduro last weekend announced a series of measures aimed at stabilizing the economy, including devaluing the bolívar by 95% and pegging it to the state-backed cryptocurrency, the petro.

However, dash, a non-state-backed cryptocurrency, is apparently catching on.

"We are seeing tens of thousands of wallet downloads from the country each month," Ryan Taylor, the CEO of the Dash Core Group, told Business Insider. "Earlier this year, Venezuela became our No. 2 market, even ahead of China and Russia, which are, of course, huge into cryptocurrency right now."

Another billboard. Ryan Taylor/Dash Core Group

The BBC reported on Wednesday that Venezuela had become "a paralyzed country" after the economic changes over the weekend. Cash withdrawals are being restricted, and there is confusion about how exactly the new system works.

Venezuelans are turning to cryptocurrencies as a way to store value as the bolívar's exchange rate spirals out of control.

Dash, an open-source cryptocurrency created in 2014, has low fees and nearly instant transactions. It's now the 14th-largest cryptocurrency in the world, according to CoinMarketCap.com, with just over $1 billion worth in circulation.

The Dash Core Group is owned by the payment network that dash runs on. The organization services the network, and its funding comes from mining fees generated by the network.

Taylor said that along with more wallet downloads, which consumers need to hold and spend dash, the cryptocurrency was seeing strong adoption with merchants.

"It took them a long time to get the first 50, first 100 [retailers]," Taylor, who is based in Arizona, told Business Insider on a call last week. "But at the beginning of July, the number was around 400, and we're already at 800. We're at this point signing up more than 200 a month."

Brand names including Subway and Calvin Klein have signed up to accept dash in Venezuela, Taylor said.

A Subway in Venezuela with a dash acceptance sign. Dash Core Group

"Effectively, even if I accept a credit card, three days later, when the funds hit my account, it's worth significantly less in Venezuela than when the authorization went through," he told Business Insider. "This is a problem that cryptocurrency can solve. Our instant transactions can solve it, and the relative stability of our cryptocurrency is better than their fiat currency."

Responding to questions over email this week, Taylor said that adoption in Venezuela had accelerated even faster after Maduro's latest economic plans were announced.

"We've seen 94 new Venezuelan merchants added to DiscoverDash.com since last week, which is about double the normal rate of about 50 merchants per week [over] the last couple of months," Taylor said, referring to the website that lists local businesses worldwide that accept dash.

"We have seen the number of dash-accepting merchant sign-ups accelerate throughout the crisis," he added. "I believe that trend will continue."

Five of the six newest merchant sign-ups on DiscoverDash.com were in Venezuela when Business Insider checked on Tuesday afternoon.

Why dash?

The characteristics of dash make it suited to act as a cash or debit-card replacement. Dash's transaction fees are in pennies rather than running into dollars, as bitcoin's fees have been known to do. Confirmation times are also in the seconds, versus slower payment-processing times for other cryptocurrencies.

But perhaps the most crucial reason dash has caught on in Venezuela is that the Dash network can finance projects on the ground.

Most cryptocurrencies have no sustainable source of funding to develop or market themselves. Dash, on the other hand, has a network of stakeholders who vote each month on how to spend funds generated by the currency's underlying code.

Dash generates new cryptocurrency when transactions are confirmed on the network. Most of the new cryptocurrency is paid to the people who confirm transactions, incentivizing them to do that job. But about 10% goes into a "treasury," a pot of money that the Dash network gives to projects and ideas looking to support and encourage dash adoption. (The Dash Core Group is in fact funded from this pot.)

A kiosk in Venezuela that accepts dash. Dash Core Group

"A lot of community members came forward with proposals to do education, hold workshops, open an office where users can come in and sit in a small group setting and get help setting up a wallet," Taylor said.

The Dash network has so far invested about $1 million in Venezuela, funding everything from billboards to sales reps.

Taylor added that dash was also seeing strong adoption in other countries with dynamics similar to Venezuela's.

"Venezuela is unique. It's the only country in the world with what can be called hyperinflation," he said. "But there are other high-inflation countries. We're seeing this with Turkey right now, Ukraine, Argentina — these are countries with very high inflation rates of 20-30% or something; 20-30%, we think, is enough to get people to try something new.

"We're going to try and be successful first in Venezuela before branching out to try this in other countries," he concluded.