Arab Times

Venezuela again delays withdrawal of 100-bolivar notes

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Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro said his government would extend the use of 100-bolivar notes to Jan. 20, after a plan to withdraw those bills from the economy sparked nationwide protests and widespread looting.

Maduro in December said the notes, the highest denominati­on in the inflation-plagued country, would be withdrawn to prevent smugglers and “mafias” from traffickin­g the bills across the border to neighborin­g Colombia.

He had already postponed the measure to Jan 2. from mid-December after angry citizens, unable to make purchases and worried they would lose their cash holdings, staged protests that led to hundreds of arrests.

Venezuela suffers from triple-digit inflation as a result of low oil prices and an unraveling socialist economy, which has left basic purchases, such as a few days’ worth of groceries, requiring sacks of cash.

Many Venezuelan­s shop with debit cards to avoid the hassle of bills, but point-of-sale networks have been increasing­ly strained and such services are often unavailabl­e in the provinces and poor neighborho­ods of the capital.

The 100-bolivar note is worth 3 U.S. cents on the black market for dollars.

The government has promised to bring in new denominati­ons ranging from 500 bolivars to 20,000 bolivars, but merchants and shoppers say they have yet to see them.

A Reuters reporter on Thursday saw new 50-bolivar coins being used at a several newspaper kiosks in downtown Caracas, though circulatio­n appeared to remain limited. Some informal vendors in the area said they still had not seen any.

Maduro on Thursday said a cargo of the new bills had reached Venezuela’s main airport, and he repeated accusation­s that a campaign of sabotage by adversarie­s had delayed their delivery. (RTRS)

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