A Story About One Woman,
One Quiz, One Village
This is not just a research project. This is a story about what happens when one curious person gets the right information — in their own language, about their own life.
She Lost a Sale.
Because of a Knowledge Gap.
Imagine Deki — a 34 year old textile weaver in Paro who crafts beautiful Kishuthara silk by hand. A tourist wants to buy. They have no cash. She cannot accept digital payment.
The tourist walks away. This happens every week. Not because Deki is not smart. Not because she is not ready. But because no one ever explained cryptocurrency to her — in her language, in terms of her life.
What If Bhutan
Had Its Own Answer?
This question is what drove the DrukShift research project — built by a Bhutanese student, for Bhutanese people, during her internship at Bhutan Data Scientists Pvt. Ltd.
113 real Bhutanese adults were surveyed — weavers, farmers, students, shopkeepers, government workers. Asked 10 honest questions about what they know, what they trust, and what they fear about cryptocurrency.
The results were surprising. Bhutan is 80% ready. The knowledge exists. The willingness is there. The barriers are specific — and fixable.
Three Things Standing
Between Bhutan and the Future
The data revealed that Bhutan's readiness gap is not about willingness — it is about three very specific and very solvable barriers.
Internet is Barrier #1
Poor internet connectivity — especially in rural Bhutan — is the single biggest obstacle to safe crypto adoption. You cannot transact safely on an unstable connection.
InfrastructureHigh Awareness, Low Understanding
96% of Bhutanese adults have heard of cryptocurrency — but most only have surface level knowledge. Awareness without understanding is the most dangerous combination.
EducationThe Scam Vulnerability Gap
The 35–44 age group has the highest trust in crypto but the lowest security awareness — the most dangerous combination. They are the most likely targets for scammers.
SecurityBack to Deki.
She Took the Quiz.
She scored 58%. The quiz did not judge her. It gave her a personalised plan — because she rated her personal readiness as 2 out of 10, her next step was clear. She followed it. Weeks later the same tourist returned. This time she showed a QR code. The payment went through. She smiled.
One quiz. One woman. One village. This is how Bhutan shifts — not all at once, but one person at a time.