Business News

New bills flown into Venezuela in currency crisis

CARACAS, (MILLAT+APP/AFP): A jetload of new currency finally
arrived in Venezuela Sunday after its delayed arrival sparked protests and looting that jolted President Nicolas Maduro’s unpopular government.
The government had briefly pulled from circulation the
largest-denomination 100-bolivar bill without replacing it on Thursday, due to the delay.
People around the country took to the streets protesting, there was
widespread looting in the south and the government boosted the number of troops on the streets.
Bolivar Governor Francisco Rangel Gomez said one person had died and
262 people were detained in his state, where 3,200 soldiers were deployed to
“restore order.”
The (100-bolivar) bill is worth about 15 US cents at the highest
official rate, and until recently accounted for 77 percent of the cash in circulation in Venezuela.
Venezuela has the world’s highest inflation rate. The government is
trying to introduce new bills in much higher denominations since most people have to carry around bags full of cash for everyday transactions.
“There are 272 crates of 50,000 500-bolivar bills,” the Central
Bank’s number-two official Jose Khan said on state-run television.
Khan said this first shipment would be followed by two more, adding
up to 60 million units of the 500-bolivar bill.
Denominations of up to 20,000 bolivares are expected to follow.
Maduro blamed the delay on “US Treasury Department sabotage.” The
bills were made in Sweden.
Maduro, a former bus driver, has presided over an unraveling of
Venezuela’s oil-rich economy as crude prices have plunged. He and predecessor Hugo Chavez have made the economy increasingly state-led.
Citizens face long queues to buy basic supplies and inflation has
soared.