Like India a month ago, Venezuela has gone down the demonetizing game plan of wiping out personal wealth held in currency and making already destitute citizens even poorer.
president Maduro announcing earlier this week he
would remove 75% of the physical cash in circulation by eliminating the
highest denomination 100 Bolivar bill, desperate and cashless
Venezuelans, angry that the government hasn’t exchanged their voided
bank notes as officials had pledged, on Friday rose up in protest and
looted stores across parts of Venezuela.
Broken showcases are seen after a shoe shop was looted in Maracaibo, Venezuela
Waving the now-worthless 100-bolivar bills, pockets of demonstrators
blocked roads, demanded that stores accept the cash, and cursed
President Nicolas Maduro in a string of towns and cities around
Venezuela, witnesses said.
A man holds a bone and a placard that reads 'Maduro: communist, unhappy,
damn. Resign, now', in front of a pole covered with 100-bolivar bills during a
protest in El Pinal, Venezuela, December 16, 2016.
Waving the now-worthless 100-bolivar bills, pockets of demonstrators
blocked roads, demanded that stores accept the cash, and cursed
President Nicolas Maduro in a string of towns and cities around
Venezuela, witnesses said. Dozens of shops were looted in various
places.
People take pictures next to a pole covered with 100-bolivar bills during a
protest in El Pinal.
An opposition legislator said there were three deaths amid violent scenes in the southern mining town of Calla.
A man burns a 100-bolivar bill during a protest in El Pinal.
The riots were quickly put down, however, when National Guard troops
were deployed to put down the unrest that broke out as far west as the
Colombian border as well as smaller towns in the east, the WSJ reports.
While many have speculated that things couldn't possibly get worse in
Venezuela, they did over the past few days as the collapsing, cash-based
economy suddenly finds itself without cash, worthless as it may be (one
US dollar is worth between 2,500 and 4,500 Bolivars in the black
market), and now with only nine days to go before Christmas, Venezuelans
grappling with a collapsing economy and hyperinflation are also left
without money. Only the Central Bank now accepts the remaining bill, and
it will only do so until Tuesday at which point the paper money will be
worth less than toilet paper, which Venezuela infamous does not have.
“Maduro is making a mockery of the people, and he has destroyed Christmas for all Venezuelans,” said
Desiré Chávez, a 33-year-old clothing vendor in Maracaibo who had
accepted the 100-bolivar notes until Thursday. “Now I don’t know what
I’ll do because that cash is useless and my kids are hungry.”
As the local population fumes, the central bank office didn’t open
Friday to facilitate the exchange, as officials had promised. Troops
turned away nearly 1,500 people who had lined up starting Thursday night
to turn in their useless bills, prompting angry mobs to block traffic
and riot. Dozens were arrested.
Venezuelan National Guard members control the crowd as people queue to deposit
their 100 bolivar notes, near Venezuela's Central Bank in Caracas.
Unlike India, where the local population was at least granted a two
month onboarding period to convert their old cash into new bills - which
has also led to mass confusion and a sharp economic slowdown - Maduro
gave his countrymen only days to turn in the 100-bolivar notes, which
until this week was the nation’s most widely used bank note.
“There have and will be difficulties while we overcome this
situation,” Mr. Maduro said in a televised speech Friday. He called the
measure necessary to combat alleged currency speculators in neighboring
Colombia and elsewhere that he blames for his country’s economic
troubles. “I appreciate the people of Venezuela’s understanding,
awareness, all of its support.”
Venezuelan National Guard members control the crowd as people queue to deposit
their 100 bolivar notes, outside Venezuela's Central Bank in Caracas
Making matters worse, the new 500-bolivar bills that the president
said would circulate this week have yet to be distributed, causing panic
as more than a third of Venezuela’s 30 million people lack a bank
account. Those lucky enough to line up at the central bank headquarters
in the capital, Caracas, were able to at least deposit their money. They were given IOUs and told they could pick up the new bills when they are ready.
It is unclear when that may be, meaning the vast majority of those
Venezuelans with savings don't even have an official currency to show
for it, but merely an unofficial promise of repayment from the
government. More skeptical readers may view this as a clear overture for
full-blown cash confiscation.
“I don’t have a bank account, and they need to tell me what I do with
this money,” said Ana Garza, a 58-year-old cake vendor from a Caracas
slum who had been waiting since 5:30 a.m. in a line that stretched 18
city blocks on Friday. She only had money for a bus ride because no one
is accepting the 100-bolivar bills anymore.
The anger was palpable: “I don’t have words for this measure from
Maduro,” griped bus driver Ricardo Salas, 54. “How do you get rid of
these bills without the new ones arriving? Buying groceries is going to
be horrible.” Assuming there are groceries: as a result of Venezuela's
hyperinflation and economic collapse, most supply chains no longer
operate, and those businesses which still function do so increasingly
solely on a barter basis.
There was some good news: the WSJ reported that on Thursday, the
central bank received at least one shipment of new 500-bolivar bills,
but it would take weeks for enough 500-bolivar bills to be available to
alleviate the scarcity of cash. Without money, residents in the
southeastern state of Bolivar blocked the only major highway in the
region that connects the country to Brazil. Nearly 40 businesses, mostly
grocery stores, were ransacked around the state.
Stacks of 100 bolivar notes are seen in a plastic crate at a stall in a street market
near Venezuela's Central Bank in Caracas
Faced with daily violent protests, the government was just as unhappy
as the general population: “this has gone from a riot over discontent
and hunger to vandalism,” said Erick Leiva, head of a local business
chamber.
Maduro this week also "temporarily" closed the Venezuela's border with neighboring Colombia and Brazil, supposedly
to crack down on currency speculation along the border, which he blames
for the free-falling value of the bolivar, in order to deflect
attention from the real cause of Venezuela's economic collapse.
The desperation was palpable for people like Daniel Morales, 28, a street vendor in Maracaibo.
“I have an 11-day-old baby and I haven’t been able to buy diapers,
nor milk,” he said. All of the bills that Mr. Morales had taken to the
central bank branch to exchange added up to 20,000 bolivars, or less
than $9. A pack of diapers costs more.
What is surprising, is that despite Venezuela's complete economic
collapse, and now effective demonetization, the country remains
technically solvent and continues to pay its foreign creditors; we also
find it surprising that despite Venezuela's de facto military regime -
as we reported previously Maduro is now just a front for the army's
control of the country - the population has shown tremendous patience
and has so far refused to revolt, despite having little left to lose.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-12-17/venezuela-deploys-national-guard-venezuelans-protest-worthless-cash