The
100-bolivar bank note will be removed from circulation in Venezuela on
Wednesday. The Venezuelan government promised six much larger notes in coming
days.
Deutsche Welle, 12 December 2016
Stuck in an
economic crisis and facing rampant inflation, the Venezuelan government
announced Sunday it would pull its largest bill from circulation on Wednesday.
The
100-bolivar note, which is worth approximately two cents, will be replaced by
much larger bank notes. Venezuelans will have 10 days after the 100-bolivar
bill is removed from circulation to exchange the notes at the central bank. In
the wake of the 100-bolivar note's demise, six bank notes worth between 500 and
20,000 bolivars will be made available, and three new coins. One US dollar can
buy up to 4,400 bolivars on the black market.
Venezuelan
President Nicolas Maduro said the move was necessary as international mafias
kept the notes in Colombian and Brazilian cities. Maduro demanded "all
land, air and sea possibilities closed immediately so that they do not return
those notes that were taken," on his television show "Contact with
Maduro."
Critics
were quick to denounce the decision, saying Maduro should fight against the use
of contraband bills on the Colombia-Venezuela border, and that there was no
realistic way for Venezuelans to exchange 100-bolivar bills currently in
circulation within the allotted time. Data from the central bank showed there
were more than six billion 100-bolivar notes in circulation in November, which
is about 48 percent of all bills and coins in use.
"When
ineptitude governs! Who would possibly think of doing something like this in
December amid all our problems?" said two-time opposition presidential
candidate Henrique Capriles on Twitter.
Cuando la ineptitud gobierna!A quién se le ocurre hacer algo así en Dic y con las dificultades que hay?Maduro y su cúpula! https://t.co/oaNqDMwlD9— Henrique Capriles R. (@hcapriles) December 11, 2016
Unprecedented
inflation
No official
data exists for inflation in Venezuela in 2016, but economic consultants
Ecoanalitica estimates annual inflation in 2016 is more than 500 percent. The
Venezuelan currency has fallen 55 percent against the US dollar on the black
market in November.
Paying for
simple items in the oil-rich company - often after waiting in lines that can last for hours - requires a large sack of bills in order to pay for whatever
may be needed. But getting cash has proven difficult in recent months and
credit card machines have suffered many problems, forcing many businesses to
ask customers to pay by bank transfer.

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