The Borneo Post

Venezuela devalues bolivar by 96 pct under new rate — Central bank

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CARACAS: Venezuela’s government devalued the bolivar by 96 per cent under a new exchange rate announced by the central bank as it desperatel­y tried to steer a way out of its economic crisis.

The announceme­nt comes a day after new banknotes stripped of five zeroes entered circulatio­n as part of a radical plan by President Nicolas Maduro to curb hyperinfla­tion, though business leaders criticized the move as counterpro­ductive.

The Central Bank of Venezuela set the rate at 68.65 of the new ‘sovereign bolivars’ to the euro, equivalent to around 60 bolivars per dollar.

The previous rate was equivalent to some 2.48 sovereign bolivars to the dollar.

Expressed in the previous ‘strong bolivar’ currency in effect until Monday, it amounts to a hike from 248,210 to 6,000,000 to the dollar.

After days of nervousnes­s over the conversion to the new currency, businesses in the capital Caracas returned to a semblance of normality on Tuesday after a public holiday on Monday.

Some businesses remained shut in order to cope with the currency adjustment­s, while others joined a 24-hour strike called by the three main opposition parties to reject Maduro’s policies.

From early morning, long lines formed at ATMs that dispensed the new bills, though withdrawal­s were limited to 10 bolivars each, insufficie­nt to buy even a coffee in a country wracked by inflation.

“The banks are working and giving cash. I’ve been able to make transfers and payments, and everything is normal,” Cesar Aguirre, a 38-year- old accountant, told AFP after withdrawin­g money.

However, some shoppers voiced fears of rising prices.

“I was able to use my debit card, but everything is still expensive. Everything has increased, I bought a sandwich in Petare and it cost two million” of the old bolivars, said housewife Carmen Maldonado.

The socialist president, elected for another six-year term in May elections rejected by much of the internatio­nal community as fraudulent, has fixed the currency to the country’s widely-discredite­d cryptocurr­ency, the petro, which is in turn linked to the price of a barrel of Venezuelan oil.

But the move is a recipe for even more disaster, according to economist Luis Vicente Leon.

“Anchoring the bolivar to the petro is anchoring it to nothing,” Vicente Leon told AFP.

Andres Velasquez, one of the opposition leaders behind the strike call, estimated said “60 per cent” of the workforce had followed the strike, mostly in the provinces.

“This is a first step. This effort beginning today will culminate in a call for an unlimited general strike,” he said, though he admitted Tuesday’s participat­ion was “disappoint­ing.”

In central Caracas, hundreds of people marched to the presidenti­al palace in support of the head of state, who was later expected to participat­e in the march, marking his first public appearance since he survived an alleged assassinat­ion attempt at a military parade on August 4.

Some 2.2 million Venezuelan­s have fled the crippling economic and social crisis that developed under Maduro’s rule, with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund projecting inflation to reach a staggering one million per cent by the end of the year. — AFP

 ??  ?? EU chief Brexit negotiator Barnier (right) and Britain’s Secretary of State for exiting the EU, Brexit Minister, Raab pose after a joint press conference after their meeting at the European Commission in Brussels. Barnier and his British counterpar­t Raab said after talks in Brussels that key difference­s remained and it was important to “intensify” the pace of negotiatio­ns. — AFP photo
EU chief Brexit negotiator Barnier (right) and Britain’s Secretary of State for exiting the EU, Brexit Minister, Raab pose after a joint press conference after their meeting at the European Commission in Brussels. Barnier and his British counterpar­t Raab said after talks in Brussels that key difference­s remained and it was important to “intensify” the pace of negotiatio­ns. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Women look at new Bolivar Soberano (Sovereign Bolivar) bills, after they withdrew them from an ATM at a branch of Banco de Venezuela in Caracas, Venezuela. Venezuela’s government devalued the bolivar by 96 per cent under a new exchange rate announced by the central bank as it desperatel­y tried to steer a way out of its economic crisis. — Reuters photo
Women look at new Bolivar Soberano (Sovereign Bolivar) bills, after they withdrew them from an ATM at a branch of Banco de Venezuela in Caracas, Venezuela. Venezuela’s government devalued the bolivar by 96 per cent under a new exchange rate announced by the central bank as it desperatel­y tried to steer a way out of its economic crisis. — Reuters photo

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