Economic basket-case Venezuela is planning a massive currency revaluation to paper over its hyperinflation woes. -Editor
President Nicolás Maduro late Thursday briefly outlined his monetary rescue plan. In a country where a dozen eggs can cost 250,000 bolivars ($5) amid worsening inflation, he would chop
three zeros off the currency — arguably bringing the price for those eggs down to 250.
“I ask you all for your prayers and support for the success of the monetary reconversion,” Maduro said in a televised event Thursday night.
The move came as Henri Falcon — a former governor running against Maduro in elections set for May — is proposing a far more radical fix. He wants to follow the path of countries such as Ecuador
and Panama by dollarizing the Venezuelan economy. Doing so, he says, would prevent the printing of new bills — instantly constraining inflation.
Socialist Venezuela is going through a crisis that has left people struggling to pay for food and find medicines. Prices are being influenced by a black-market exchange rate that rises by the day
and is currently five times the nearly inaccessible official rate.
Customers are standing in hours-long lines at banks to take out a daily limit, set so low that it barely covers the price of a cup of coffee. Larger transactions are done by bank card or transfer
— although some vendors are charging double for electronic payments.
Maduro’s redenomination plan was met with serious skepticism by critics and analysts, who say that the impact on hyperinflation would be minimal — and that the plan would be confusing. By June 2,
under Maduro’s plan, new bolivars with lower denominations would be circulated — but old ones, with denominations as high as 100,000, would remain valid. It would leave vendors charging two prices —
one for old bills, the other for the redenominated bolivar.
“Taking out three zeros doesn’t in any way solve any of the causes of hyperinflation,” said Jean Paul Leidenz, senior economist at Caracas-based Ecoanalitica. “It’s just a cosmetic fix that won’t
work.”
To read the complete article, see:
Venezuela hopes to tackle the world’s
worst inflation by deleting zeros from its currency
(https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2018/03/23/venezuela-hopes-to-tackle-the-worlds-worst-inflation-by-deleting-zeros-from-its-currency/)
Two new coins are planned as well. Pabitra Saha forwarded this article in Spanish. Thanks. Here's some of the text translated to English. The highlighting is mine.
-Editor
After the presidential announcement of a monetary reconversion that will come into force on June 4, the president of the Central Bank of Venezuela, Ramón Lobo, presented the family of bills that
make up the "Sovereign Bolivar" " .
The new Bs 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 and 500 bills and the Bs 0.5 and 1 coins leave behind the so-called "Bolívar fuerte", in an attempt by the Nicolás Maduro government to
provide "a new monetary cone with greater purchasing power ".
To read the complete article, see:
Lanzan un “Bolívar Soberano” en busca de “mayor poder adquisitivo”
(http://sumarium.com/gobierno-abre-paso-a-un-bolivar-soberano-en-busca-de-mayor-poder-adquisitivo/)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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