Venezuelans lined up to deposit 100-unit banknotes before they turned worthless, but replacement bills had yet to arrive, increasing the cash chaos in the country with the world's highest inflation.
Some
frustrated customers received expiring 100-bolivar notes when they
withdrew money at ATMs, then immediately had to line up again to
re-deposit them.
Venezuelans
are stuck in currency limbo after President Nicolas Maduro ordered the
100-bolivar note -- the largest denomination, currently worth about
three US cents -- removed from circulation in 72 hours.
The
government announced late Thursday Dec 15,2016 that Venezuela's borders with
Colombia and Brazil -- closed to fight "mafias" allegedly hoarding the
notes -- will stay shut three more days.
The
Thursday deadline was supposed to coincide with the launch of a
500-bolivar bill, the first in a new series of banknotes that will
eventually be issued in denominations of up to 20,000 bolivars.
But with the new bills yet to arrive in the capital Caracas by midday, Venezuelans were left facing economic chaos.
"I
don't get the joke," office worker Yarelis Carrero said. "When you
withdraw cash at the ATMs, they give you 100-bolivar bills. And you
can't get the new ones inside the bank, either."
From
Friday Dec 16,2016, Venezuelans will be able to exchange 100-bolivar bills only at
one of the central bank's two headquarters buildings.
Maduro,
who has presided over an unraveling of Venezuela's oil-rich economy,
said the 100-bolivar note had to be killed because "mafias" were
hoarding it abroad in what he called a US-backed plot to destabilize
Venezuela.
In
response, he sealed the borders with Colombia and Brazil, where he says
much of the hoarding is happening. Now those frontiers will stay shut
until Sunday Dec 18,2016
That
led to pandemonium on the border, as foreigners rushed home and
Venezuelans found themselves cut off from precious supplies of food,
medicine and basic goods that are in desperately short supply in
Venezuela.
Central bank chief Nelson Merentes promised last week that "millions and millions" of new bank notes were on their way.
The
new bills -- which are being printed abroad -- were originally meant to
circulate alongside the old ones during a transition period.
But Maduro axed that plan when he issued his decree against the 100-bolivar note Sunday.
It accounted for 77 percent of the cash in circulation in Venezuela, according to official figures.
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