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#1 Venezuela to introduce bigger bills amid soaring inflation

Posted: Sun Dec 04, 2016 9:05 pm
by frigidmagi
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Venezuela's central bank has said it will issue higher-denominated currency notes mid-December. The South American country is facing an acute economic crisis as its inflation is expected to surpass four digits next year.

Venezuela will introduce six new bills ranging from 500 to 20,000 bolivars, the OPEC nation's central bank said in a statement on Sunday.

Currently, the largest-denominated Venezuelan note is 100 bolivars (9.4 euros), which is worth just around two US cents on the black market. A two-liter soft drink bottle can cost 25 times that amount.

The socialist-run economy is on the verge of collapse as its currency has lost 67 percent of its value on the black market, falling to 4,587 bolivars per US dollar, according to Dollar Today, a tracking agency.

Inflation is already in triple digits - the world's highest - and is likely to surpass four digits next year, according to the International Monetary Fund. The country's ATMs are almost without cash and its credit card payment system froze up for several hours on Friday.

Explaining the rationale behind the decision to introduce new notes, the central bank said it will "make the payments system more efficient, facilitate commercial transactions and minimize the costs of production, replacement and transfer … which will translate into benefits for banking, trade and the general population."

Three coins of smaller value will also be issued by the government.

President Nicolas Maduro blamed the "mafias" in neighboring Colombia for the crisis, saying they are trying to carry out an "economic coup" against his country. He also said the country's opposition has triggered the crisis with the help from Washington.

"The right wing wants to impose on Venezuela a parallel exchange rate from an account in Miami, and from that account take the dollar to a disastrously crazy level," Maduro said in a televised speech

#2 Re: Venezuela to introduce bigger bills amid soaring inflati

Posted: Sun Dec 04, 2016 10:27 pm
by LadyTevar
Is there no way to cut the inflation, other than issuing new money? I know the supply lines are a wreck, they can't even stock store shelves half the time, but surely printing more money isn't going to make it stop.

#3 Re: Venezuela to introduce bigger bills amid soaring inflati

Posted: Mon Dec 05, 2016 6:39 am
by B4UTRUST
Well, they could stop basing their entire economy on reliance on the production/sale of oil. That would help solve some of the problem. The people in charge getting their heads out of their asses and admitting the problem instead of trying to insist that the bolivar still holds the value of 10 bolivar to 1 USD would be another thing to do. There's others but honestly, most of this stems from a government manned by people who refuse to acknowledge the problem seemingly and just want to scape goat it as long as possible.

#4 Re: Venezuela to introduce bigger bills amid soaring inflati

Posted: Mon Dec 05, 2016 4:04 pm
by LadyTevar
OPEC has raised oil prices. Do you think that might help them out a little?

#5 Re: Venezuela to introduce bigger bills amid soaring inflati

Posted: Mon Dec 05, 2016 7:18 pm
by Lys
The problems in the country run deeper than just low oil prices. The government under Chavez and Maduro redirected the funds intended to maintain the oil production infrastructure into social spending, essentially eating the seed corn. As a result oil production is the lowest it's been since the 80s oil crash, and the ridiculously subsidized domestic consumption (sold below cost) has been rising which also cuts into exports. Not to mention that they've been nationalizing most industries in the country like drunken communists, and then handing over control to party loyalists who don't know how to do anything, with the net result that the more they nationalize the deeper in the shitter the economy goes. At this point they've nationalized basically everything and so the economy has been in deep shit. That's on top of the problem that it's legitimately hard to have a diverse economy when oil production dominates your GDP. At this point the solution is to stop being incompetent low-rent communists. Also to shoot half the bureaucracy and judiciary for corruption.

That said yes, higher oil prices won't hurt.