Venezuela to slash six zeroes from currency

Venezuela to slash six zeroes from currency

Photo: Federico Parra

 

Venezuela will slash six zeroes off its inflation-battered currency the bolivar to make it easier to use, the central bank said on Thursday.

By MSN

Aug 5, 2021

The change will take effect on October 1 with the issuance of new currency notes, called the digital bolívar.





“All monetary amounts expressed in national currency will be divided by one million,” the central bank of President Nicolas Maduro’s beleaguered leftist government said.

It said the goal of the change is to “facilitate” the use of the bolivar.

It is the third time in 13 years that Venezuela – suffering the worst economic crisis in its modern era – has used such a measure.

In August 2018, the government lopped five zeros off its bank notes, having taken off three in 2008.

In 2018, the government replaced the ironically named strong bolivar with the sovereign bolivar.

The once-wealthy oil producer is enduring its fourth year of hyperinflation and its eighth year of recession.

From January through to May prices rose 265 percent.

Inflation was almost 3,000 percent in 2020 and more than 9,500 percent the year before, according to central bank figures.

“It was an expected decision,” economist Cesar Aristimuno, director of Aristimuno Herrera & Associates, told AFP.

“By itself it was necessary … the billing and accounting processes for companies were already practically impossible.”

Read More: MSN – Venezuela to slash six zeroes from currency

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