Orlando Sentinel

Venezuelan­s buy gas with cigs, food

Motorists who long enjoyed the world’s cheapest gasoline now learning to barter at the pump.

- By Scott Smith

CARACAS, Venezuela — Motorists in socialist Venezuela have long enjoyed the world’s cheapest gasoline, with fuel so heavily subsidized that a full tank these days costs a tiny fraction of a U.S. penny. But the economy is in such shambles that drivers are now paying for fill-ups with a little food, a candy bar or just a cigarette.

Bartering at the pump has taken off as hyperinfla­tion makes Venezuela’s paper currency, the bolívar, hard to find and renders some denominati­ons all but worthless, so that nobody will accept them.

Without cash in their wallets, drivers often hand gas station attendants a bag of rice, cooking oil or whatever is within reach.

“You can pay with a cigarette,” said Orlando Molina, filling up his subcompact Ford Ka in Caracas. “Heck, it’s no secret to anyone that it goes for nothing.”

Gas is so dirt-cheap that station attendants don’t even know the price. Empty-handed drivers get waved through, paying nothing at all.

This barter system, while perhaps the envy of cash-strapped drivers outside the country, is just another symptom of bedlam in Venezuela.

The South American nation of roughly 30 million people is gripped by a deepening political and economic crisis. People live with a nagging feeling that anything from violent street protests to a massive power failure could throw their lives into chaos at any moment.

More than 4 million Venezuelan­s have fled the country in recent years, escaping low wages, broken hospitals, failing basic services and lack of security.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund says inflation is expected to hit a staggering 200,000% this year.

Venezuela dropped five zeros from its currency last year in a futile attempt to keep up with inflation. Soaring prices quickly devoured the new denominati­ons.

The smallest bill in circulatio­n, 50 bolívares, is worth about quarter of a U.S. penny.

City buses and even banks don’t accept it, arguing it would take such a thick wad of bills to pay for even the most modest items that it wouldn’t be worth the trouble. The largest bill, 50,000 bolívares, equals $2.50.

Venezuela, which sits atop the world’s largest oil reserves, was once rich. But the economy has fallen into ruin because of what critics say has been two decades of corruption and mismanagem­ent under socialist rule.

President Nicolas Maduro’s hold on power is under challenge from opposition politician Juan Guaidó, who has the backing of the United States and more than 50 other countries that contend Maduro’s reelection in 2018 was crooked.

Gasoline prices are a deadly serious matter in Venezuela. Roughly 300 people died in 1989 during riots that erupted after the country’s president at the time ordered a modest rise in fuel prices.

Amid the economic crash, Maduro has not substantia­lly raised gas prices, a strategy that was probably reinforced after violent protests recently forced the president of Ecuador to back off plans to end fuel subsidies there.

 ?? ARIANA CUBILLOS/AP ?? Orlando Godoy takes a package of corn flour as payment at a gas station near Caracas.
ARIANA CUBILLOS/AP Orlando Godoy takes a package of corn flour as payment at a gas station near Caracas.

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