Venezuela hiked gasoline prices for the first time in almost
two decades and devalued its currency as President Nicolas Maduro attempts to
address triple-digit inflation and the economy’s deepest recession in over a
decade. The primary exchange rate used for essential imports, such as food and
medicine, will weaken to 10 bolivars per dollar from 6.3, Maduro said in a
televised address to the nation. The government will also eliminate an
intermediate rate that last sold dollars for about 13 bolivars and improve an
alternative “free-floating, complementary” market that trades around 203
bolivars per dollar. More… Thursday, February 18, 2016
Venezuela Boosts Gas Price, Devalues Bolivar as Economy Unravels
Venezuela hiked gasoline prices for the first time in almost
two decades and devalued its currency as President Nicolas Maduro attempts to
address triple-digit inflation and the economy’s deepest recession in over a
decade. The primary exchange rate used for essential imports, such as food and
medicine, will weaken to 10 bolivars per dollar from 6.3, Maduro said in a
televised address to the nation. The government will also eliminate an
intermediate rate that last sold dollars for about 13 bolivars and improve an
alternative “free-floating, complementary” market that trades around 203
bolivars per dollar. More…
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