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Venezuela to remove five zeroes from ailing currency

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CARACAS, (Reuters) - Venezuela will remove five zeroes from the bolivar currency rather than the three zeroes originally planned, President Nicolas Maduro said yesterday, in an effort to keep up with inflation projected to reach 1 million percent this year.

The OPEC nation’s economy has been steadily collapsing since the 2014 crash of oil prices left it unable to maintain its socialist economic system that for years provided lavish subsidies while enforcing strict price controls. Annual inflation in June topped 46,000 percent, according to the opposition-run Congress. The IMF said this week it could hit seven digits this year, putting it on par with the crises of Zimbabwe in the 2000s and Germany in the 1920s.

“The monetary reconversi­on will start on Aug. 20,” Maduro said in a televised broadcast, showing new bills that are to be released next month.

He said the overhaul would tie the bolivar to the recently launched state-backed cryptocurr­ency called the petro, without offering details.

Cryptocurr­ency experts have said the petro suffers from a lack of credibilit­y because of a lack of confidence in Maduro’s government and the mismanagem­ent of the country’s existing national currency.

The government has said it is the victim of an “economic war” led by opposition leaders with the help of Washington, which last year levied several rounds of sanctions against Maduro’s administra­tion and a group of top officials. The country’s high inflation rate has made it nearly impossible to obtain cash.

Venezuela’s minimum wage is now about the equivalent of $1 a month, which has left citizens across the country unable to eat properly or obtain basic medical care - fueling an exodus of Venezuelan­s seeking to escape the economic crisis.

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