The Borneo Post

Venezuela creating digital currency amid financing crisis

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CARACAS: Venezuela is creating a digital currency to combat a financial blockade by the United States, President Nicolas Maduro announced Sunday.

The Petro will be backed by Venezuela’s oil and gas reserves and its gold and diamond holdings, the president said in his weekly television program.

“This is going to allow us to move toward new forms of internatio­nal financing for the country’s economic and social developmen­t,” the president said.

The government a l so announced the creation of a “blockchain observator­y” – a software platform for buying and selling virtual currency.

Although the president did not offer many details, analysts such as Henkel Garcia see the possibilit­y of success as limited.

“You can build it, but trust, acceptance and use is what will determine the cryptocurr­ency’s success. For me, it will be quite limited. The bolivar is is also backed by reserves and has no strength,” Garcia, director of consultanc­y Econometri­ca.

“Confidence in a country is going to depend on the levels of production and the wealth it generates. For example, people trust the dollar for the levels of wealth associated with it,” he said.

The announceme­nt comes as Venezuela faces acute financing problems after creditors and ratings agencies declared the government and state- run oil firm PDVSA to be in partial default for missing interest and

This is going to allow us to move toward new forms of internatio­nal financing for the country’s economic and social developmen­t. Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela President

principle payments on bonds.

Maduro blames sanct ions imposed by the United States in August barring American citizens and companies from buying any new Venezuelan government or PDVSA bonds.

Venezuela is mired in a deep economic crisis triggered mainly by a fall in crude oil prices and a drop in oil production. Petroleum is its main source of hard currency.

Over the past year, the Venezue l an bol iva r has plummeted 95.5 per cent against the dollar on the black market.

Virtual currency is not new for Venezuela – considered by specialist­s a haven for bitcoin production with minimal costs.

It is estimated that tens of thousands of people mine bitcoin to protect themselves from inflation – set to surpass 2,300 per cent in 2018 – by exchanging earnings for dollars or more bitcoin.

In Venezuela, a the law does not expressly prohibit mining bitcoin – experts say officials are involved – but the authoritie­s persecute those who do it for power theft. — AFP

 ??  ?? Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro speaks during his weekly radio and TV broadcast ‘Los Domingos con Maduro’ (The Sundays with Maduro) in Caracas,Venezuela. — Reuters photo
Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro speaks during his weekly radio and TV broadcast ‘Los Domingos con Maduro’ (The Sundays with Maduro) in Caracas,Venezuela. — Reuters photo

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