Dubai Telegraph - Return to bad days of hyperinflation looms in Venezuela

EUR -
AED 4.359312
AFN 78.343327
ALL 96.027945
AMD 449.451262
ANG 2.124849
AOA 1088.491795
ARS 1717.340716
AUD 1.703709
AWG 2.136624
AZN 2.022635
BAM 1.943176
BBD 2.391206
BDT 145.078707
BGN 1.993435
BHD 0.447513
BIF 3517.2352
BMD 1.187013
BND 1.50352
BOB 8.203841
BRL 6.242865
BSD 1.187207
BTN 109.023557
BWP 15.531157
BYN 3.381404
BYR 23265.46415
BZD 2.387728
CAD 1.612742
CDF 2679.687577
CHF 0.916511
CLF 0.026023
CLP 1027.514946
CNY 8.247849
CNH 8.256296
COP 4350.9979
CRC 587.890629
CUC 1.187013
CUP 31.455857
CVE 109.554196
CZK 24.329563
DJF 210.956502
DKK 7.467728
DOP 74.744104
DZD 153.828685
EGP 55.701348
ERN 17.805202
ETB 184.429348
FJD 2.615233
FKP 0.860501
GBP 0.866188
GEL 3.199049
GGP 0.860501
GHS 13.005726
GIP 0.860501
GMD 87.250062
GNF 10417.410267
GTQ 9.105996
GYD 248.380562
HKD 9.27016
HNL 31.335952
HRK 7.533861
HTG 155.369973
HUF 381.142317
IDR 19906.21601
ILS 3.668351
IMP 0.860501
INR 108.897452
IQD 1555.289393
IRR 50002.942908
ISK 145.006024
JEP 0.860501
JMD 186.041368
JOD 0.84164
JPY 183.360944
KES 153.125155
KGS 103.804785
KHR 4773.945484
KMF 489.049968
KPW 1068.410471
KRW 1718.522957
KWD 0.364224
KYD 0.989186
KZT 597.100949
LAK 25549.446568
LBP 106315.059642
LKR 367.144816
LRD 213.988904
LSL 18.850653
LTL 3.504943
LVL 0.718013
LYD 7.449665
MAD 10.769128
MDL 19.964515
MGA 5305.621026
MKD 61.594706
MMK 2492.783053
MNT 4234.917227
MOP 9.546897
MRU 47.370055
MUR 53.926471
MVR 18.339807
MWK 2058.660443
MXN 20.675003
MYR 4.679253
MZN 75.672557
NAD 18.850653
NGN 1647.883777
NIO 43.686921
NOK 11.410464
NPR 174.434041
NZD 1.968893
OMR 0.456389
PAB 1.187207
PEN 3.96938
PGK 5.082027
PHP 69.967368
PKR 332.14877
PLN 4.211002
PYG 7952.33704
QAR 4.32848
RON 5.094073
RSD 117.393304
RUB 90.210804
RWF 1731.820826
SAR 4.452007
SBD 9.565075
SCR 16.377624
SDG 713.99297
SEK 10.543285
SGD 1.508861
SHP 0.890568
SLE 28.933499
SLL 24891.078237
SOS 678.489285
SRD 45.166461
STD 24568.782404
STN 24.342269
SVC 10.387604
SYP 13127.864451
SZL 18.844496
THB 37.423019
TJS 11.082502
TMT 4.166417
TND 3.41104
TOP 2.858043
TRY 51.618117
TTD 8.060768
TWD 37.458351
TZS 3056.560101
UAH 50.883858
UGX 4244.496821
USD 1.187013
UYU 46.071084
UZS 14513.832063
VES 435.452037
VND 30791.129595
VUV 141.976983
WST 3.222026
XAF 651.717577
XAG 0.013945
XAU 0.000245
XCD 3.207964
XCG 2.139636
XDR 0.812564
XOF 651.728487
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.988273
ZAR 19.142082
ZMK 10684.549964
ZMW 23.299029
ZWL 382.217855
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    85.2

    +0.18%

  • BCC

    0.6200

    80.79

    +0.77%

  • BCE

    0.3350

    25.82

    +1.3%

  • RIO

    -4.1400

    90.99

    -4.55%

  • GSK

    0.9900

    51.645

    +1.92%

  • CMSD

    0.0800

    24.14

    +0.33%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4300

    16

    -2.69%

  • RELX

    -0.4700

    35.695

    -1.32%

  • RBGPF

    1.3800

    83.78

    +1.65%

  • CMSC

    0.0050

    23.7

    +0.02%

  • JRI

    0.0740

    13.029

    +0.57%

  • BTI

    0.4150

    60.625

    +0.68%

  • VOD

    -0.0890

    14.621

    -0.61%

  • AZN

    0.2900

    92.88

    +0.31%

  • BP

    -0.1800

    37.86

    -0.48%

Return to bad days of hyperinflation looms in Venezuela
Return to bad days of hyperinflation looms in Venezuela / Photo: Federico PARRA - AFP

Return to bad days of hyperinflation looms in Venezuela

Venezuelans are grappling with political and economic chaos, a mass population exodus and fears of a US military attack. Now, their wallets are ever thinner as a return to hyperinflation looms.

Text size:

Increasingly, people live hand to mouth, buying a tomato here, a few onions there as they manage to scrape together enough bolivars for just the basics.

"If we earn 20 bolivars, we need 50," informal merchant Jacinto Moreno, 64, told AFP in downtown Caracas.

To buy a kilogram of tomatoes, a Venezuelan needs the equivalent of one US dollar. But the average salary per month is only a few hundred dollars.

Reliable economic figures are hard to come by and a large portion of incomes are earned under the table in the informal sector.

"Prices go up every day," lamented Moreno. "Every day."

- 130,000 percent -

Venezuela has already had the highest inflation rate in the world, more than once.

Memories are still fresh of a record 130,000 year-on-year rise in prices recorded in 2018, according to official figures -- the peak of a four-year hyperinflationary period that ended in 2021 and pushed millions to emigrate.

Venezuela's central bank has not published inflation figures since October 2024, after President Nicolas Maduro claimed victory in what is widely considered his second stolen election in a row.

According to the leader himself, inflation reached 48 percent in 2024.

The International Monetary Fund projects a 548 percent figure for Venezuela for 2025 and 629 percent for 2026.

Norma Guzman, a 66-year-old who works as an office cleaner, told AFP she can no longer afford to buy groceries monthly or weekly.

Leaving a store with nothing but three tomatoes in a bag, she said "I shop daily" as and when she, her husband and their son manage to put aside money for food.

Maduro blames Venezuela's economic woes squarely on US sanctions.

He also accuses Washington, which has deployed a fleet of warships in the Caribbean in a stated anti-drug operation, of seeking to depose him and seize the formerly rich petrostate's vast oil deposits.

Maduro has said Venezuela will register GDP growth of over nine percent in 2025. The IMF estimates 0.5 percent.

- Economists detained -

Colombian-based Venezuelan economist Oscar Torrealba is among those who expect inflation to soar above 800 percent -- higher than IMF projections.

"This undoubtedly brings us much closer to a hyperinflationary scenario," he told AFP.

For Torrealba, hyperinflation is official once prices rise by more than 50 percent for three consecutive months.

But definitions vary, and for other experts an annual rate of 500 percent, such as predicted by the IMF, already amounts to hyperinflation.

Few economists still living in Venezuela dare to publicly challenge the official line, especially after several of their peers, including a former finance minister, were detained this year.

The arrests were never officially announced but coincided with a series of police operations against the publication of parallel exchange rates on web pages that were subsequently removed.

- Dollar shortage -

For now, the steep price rises have not resulted in product shortages as they did a few years ago, when people queued for hours to just to buy a small bag of coffee or sugar.

Maduro at the time responded by decriminalizing use of the US dollar -- which became Venezuela's de facto currency -- as well as halting money printing and relaxing exchange controls.

Measured in dollar prices, economist Torrealba said Venezuela's inflation hit 80 percent year-on-year in October.

The country is running low on the greenbacks used for a big portion of purchases, and which many Venezuelans try to save as insurance against bolivar devaluation.

A major source of foreign currency used to be US oil giant Chevron, which continues to operate under a special license despite sanctions but no longer pays royalties in cash. It pays in crude, instead, which the state sells on at a discount.

With fewer dollars in the market, the gap between the official exchange rate and the informal one is now over 60 percent, according to analysts.

c-jt/ba/pgf/mr/mlr/dw

H.Pradhan--DT