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Venezuelan bolívar

The bolívar [boˈliβaɾ] is the official currency of Venezuela. Named after the hero of Latin American independence Simón Bolívar, it was introduced following the monetary reform in 1879, before which the venezolano was circulating. Due to its decades-long reliance on silver and gold standards, and then on a peg to the United States dollar, it was considered among the most stable currencies and was internationally accepted until 1964, when the government decided to adopt a floating exchange rate instead.

Venezuelan bolívar
bolívar venezolano (Spanish)
ISO 4217
CodeVED (numeric: 926)
VES (numeric: 928)ISO 4217 Standard definition:
  • "Data Standards, ISO 4217 - Currency Code Maintenance: Get the Correct Currency Code". www.six-group.com. SIX Group. 2022-10-01.
  • "List One: Currency, fund and precious metal codes" (XLS). www.six-group.com. SIX Group. 2022-09-23.
  • "List Two: Fund codes registered with the Maintenance Agency" (XLS). www.six-group.com. SIX Group. 2018-08-29.
  • "List Three: Codes for historic denominations of currencies and funds" (XLS). www.six-group.com. SIX Group. 2018-08-22.
  • "Overview Amendments" (XLSX). www.six-group.com. SIX Group. 2022-09-23.
Subunit0.01
Unit
Unitbolívar
Pluralbolívares
SymbolBs.[1] or Bs.D
Nicknamebolo(s), luca(s), real(es)
Denominations
Subunit
1100céntimo
BanknotesVED series: Bs. 5, Bs. 10, Bs. 20, Bs. 50, Bs. 100
Coins25, 50 céntimos, Bs. 1
Demographics
User(s) Venezuela
Issuance
Central bankBanco Central de Venezuela
 Websitewww.bcv.org.ve
Valuation
Inflation 114.10% (2022)[2][3][4]
ValueOfficial rate
US$1 = Bs. 24.65
(Apr 24, 2023)[1]
Parallel rate
US$1 = Bs. 20.72
(Jan 11, 2023)[5]

Since 1983, the currency has experienced a prolonged period of high inflation, losing value almost 500-fold against the US dollar in the process. The depreciation became manageable in the mid-2000s, but it still stayed in double digits.[6] It was then, on 1 January 2008, that the hard bolívar (bolívar fuerte in Spanish, sign: Bs.F, code: VEF) replaced the original bolívar (sign: Bs; code: VEB) at a rate of Bs.F 1 to Bs. 1,000[1][7] (the abbreviation Bs. is due to the first and the final letters of the plural form of the currency's name, bolívares).

The value of the hard bolívar, pegged to the US dollar, did not stay stable for long despite attempts to institute capital controls. Venezuela entered another period of abnormally high inflation in 2012, which the country hasn't exited as of April 2023. The central bank stuck to the pegged subsidised exchange rate until January 2018, which was overpriced so people began using parallel exchange rates despite a ban on publishing them. From 2016 to 2019 and again in 2020, the currency experienced hyperinflation for a total period of 38 months.[8]

The rampant inflation prompted two redenominations. The first occurred in August 2018, when Bs.F 100,000 were exchanged for 1 sovereign bolívar (bolívar soberano in Spanish, sign: Bs.S, code: VES),[9] and another one happened on 1 October 2021, but called "Nueva expresión monetaria" or new monetary expression, which removes 6 zeros from the currency without affecting its denomination but did introduce a new ISO code[10][a] at a rate of Bs.S 1,000,000 = Bs.D 1,[11] thus making Bs.D 1 worth Bs. 100,000,000,000,000 (1014, or Bs. 100 trillion in short scale)

Both currencies are in circulation,[12] though the economy has undergone extensive currency substitution, so the majority of transactions happen in US dollars, or, to a lesser extent, the Colombian peso.[8][11][13]

History

Bolívar

Bolívar
Preceded by:
Venezolano
Reason: unification of circulating currencies
Ratio: 15 venezolano = 1 bolívar
Currency of Venezuela
31 March 1879 – 31 December 2007
Succeeded by:
Hard bolívar
Reason: inflation
Ratio: 1000 bolívares = 1 hard bolívar
Venezuelan bolívar
bolívar (Spanish)
ISO 4217
CodeVEB
Unit
Pluralbolívares
SymbolBs
Denominations
Subunit
1100céntimo
Plural
céntimocéntimos
BanknotesBs. 1,000, Bs. 2,000, Bs. 5,000, Bs. 10,000, Bs. 20,000, Bs. 50,000
CoinsBs. 10, Bs. 20, Bs. 50, Bs. 100, Bs. 500, Bs. 1,000
Demographics
User(s)  Venezuela
Issuance
Central bankBanco Central de Venezuela
 Websitewww.bcv.org.ve
This infobox shows the latest status before this currency was rendered obsolete.

The bolívar is named after the hero of Latin American independence Simón Bolívar. The bolívar was adopted by the monetary law of 1879, replacing the short-lived venezolano at a rate of five bolívares to one venezolano. Initially, the bolívar was defined on the silver standard, equal to 4.5 g fine silver, following the principles of the Latin Monetary Union. The monetary law of 1887 made the gold bolívar unlimited legal tender, and the gold standard came into full operation in 1910. Venezuela went off gold in 1930, and in 1934, the bolívar exchange rate was fixed in terms of the US dollar at a rate of Bs. 3.914 = US$1, revalued to Bs. 3.18 = 1 US dollar in 1937, a rate which lasted until 1941. Until 18 February 1983 (now called Viernes Negro [es], Spanish for Black Friday, by many Venezuelans),[14] the bolívar had been the region's most stable and internationally accepted currency. It then fell prey to high devaluation.

Exchange controls were imposed on February 5, 2003, to limit capital flight.[15] The rate was pegged to the US dollar at a fixed exchange rate of Bs. 1,600 to the dollar.

Hard bolívar

Hard bolívar
Preceded by:
Bolívar
Reason: inflation
Ratio: 1000 bolívares = 1 hard bolívar
Currency of Venezuela
1 January 2008 – 20 August 2018
Succeeded by:
Sovereign bolívar
Reason: hyperinflation
Ratio: 100,000 hard bolívares = 1 sovereign bolívar
Venezuelan hard bolívar[16]
bolívar fuerte (Spanish)
ISO 4217
CodeVEF
Unit
Pluralbolívares fuertes
SymbolBs.F or Bs.
Nicknamebolo(s), luca(s), real(es)
Denominations
Subunit
1100céntimo
Banknotes
 Freq. usedBs.F 1,000, Bs.F 2,000, Bs.F 5,000, Bs.F 10,000, Bs.F 20,000, Bs.F 100,000[1]
 Rarely usedBs.F 2, Bs.F 5, Bs.F 10, Bs.F 20, Bs.F 50, Bs.F 100, Bs.F 500
Coins
 Rarely usedBs.F 1, Bs.F 10, Bs.F 50, and Bs.F 100[1]
Demographics
User(s)  Venezuela
Issuance
Central bankBanco Central de Venezuela
 Websitewww.bcv.org.ve
Valuation
Inflation  80,000% (2018 est.)[17]
Pegged withUS$1 = BsF. 248,832 (Dicom auction)[1]
(see this section for parallel market rate)[18]
This infobox shows the latest status before this currency was rendered obsolete.
Coins and low-value banknotes were rendered obsolete by hyperinflation.

The government announced on 7 March 2007 that the bolívar would be redenominated at a ratio of 1,000 to 1 on 1 January 2008 and renamed the bolívar fuerte, or hard bolívar in an effort to facilitate the ease of transaction and accounting.[19] The newer name literally means "hard bolívar", as in hard currency, and in reference to an old coin called the peso fuerte worth 10 Spanish reales.[20] The alternate meaning of "strong" was also used by the government in promotional material[21][22] The official exchange rate is restricted to individuals by CADIVI, which imposes an annual limit on the amount available for travel.

 
Inflation represented by the time it would take, in years, for money to lose 90% of its value (301-day rolling average, inverted logarithmic scale).

Since the government of Hugo Chávez established strict currency controls in 2003, there have been a series of five currency devaluations, disrupting the economy.[23] On 8 January 2010, the value was changed by the government from the fixed exchange rate of Bs.F 2.15 to Bs.F 2.60 for some imports (certain foods and healthcare goods) and Bs.F 4.30 for other imports like cars, petrochemicals, and electronics.[24] On 4 January 2011, the fixed exchange rate became Bs.F 4.30 for US$1.00 for both sides of the economy. On 13 February 2013 the hard bolívar was devalued to Bs.F 6.30 per US$1 in an attempt to counter budget deficits.[25] On 18 February 2016, President Maduro used his newly granted economic powers to devalue the official exchange rate of the hard bolívar from Bs.F 6.30 per US$1 to Bs.F 10 per US$1, which is a 37% depreciation against the US dollar.[26]

The hard bolívar entered hyperinflation in November 2016.[27]

On January 26, 2018, the government retired the protected and subsidized Bs.F 10 per US$1 exchange rate that was highly overvalued as a result of rampant inflation.[28] On February 5, 2018, the Central Bank of Venezuela announced a 99.6% [sic] devaluation, with the exchange rate going to Bs.F 25,000 per US$. This made the hard bolívar the second-least-valued circulating currency in the world based on the official exchange rate, behind only the Iranian rial, and between September 2017 and August 2018, according to the informal exchange rate, the hard bolívar was the least-valued circulating currency unit in the world.[29][dubious ]

The official exchange rate stood at Bs.F 248,832 to US$1 as of August 10, 2018, making it the least-valued circulating currency in the world based on official exchange rates.[30]

In June 2018, the government authorized a new exchange rate for buying, but not selling, currency. On August 13, 2018, the rate was Bs.F 4,010,000 to US$1, according to ZOOM Remesas.[31]

Sovereign bolívar

Sovereign bolívar
Preceded by:
Hard bolívar
Reason: hyperinflation
Ratio: 100,000 hard bolívares = 1 sovereign bolívar
Currency of Venezuela
20 August 2018 –
Venezuelan bolívar
bolívar venezolano (Spanish)
ISO 4217
CodeVES (numeric: 928)
Subunit0.01
Unit
Pluralbolívares
SymbolBs. or Bs.S
Nicknamebolo(s), luca(s), real(es)
Denominations
Subunit
1100céntimo
BanknotesVES series: Bs.S 10,000, Bs.S 20,000, Bs.S 50,000, Bs.S 200,000, Bs.S 500,000, Bs.S 1,000,000
Demographics
User(s)  Venezuela
Issuance
Central bankBanco Central de Venezuela
 Websitewww.bcv.org.ve
Valuation
Inflation  4,355-5,713% (2020)[32][33][34]
ValueOfficial rate
US$1 = Bs.D 4.34
(Mar 25, 2022)[1]
Parallel rate
US$1 = Bs.D 4.43
(Mar 25, 2022)[5]

On 22 March 2018, President Nicolás Maduro announced a new monetary reform program, with a planned revaluation of the currency at a ratio of 1,000 to 1.[35] The change was to be made effective from 4 June 2018.[36][37]

In May 2018, the government required prices to be expressed in both hard bolívares and sovereign bolívares at the then-planned rate of 1,000 to 1. For example, one kilogram of pasta was shown with a price of Bs.F 695,000 and Bs.S 695. Prices expressed in the new currency were rounded to the nearest 50 céntimos as that was expected to be the lowest denomination in circulation at launch. The rounding created difficulties because some items and sales qualities were priced at significantly less than Bs.S 0.50; for example a litre of gasoline and a Caracas Metro ticket typically cost Bs.S 0.06 and Bs.S 0.04, respectively.[38]

President Nicolas Maduro announcing the redenomination of the Venezuelan bolívar on 17 August 2018.

The change in currency was originally scheduled for June 4, 2018. The President delayed the planned June launch date of the sovereign bolívar, citing from Aristides Maza, "the period established to carry out the conversion is not enough".[39] The revaluation was rescheduled to 20 August 2018, and the rate changed to 100,000 to 1, with prices being required to be expressed at the new rate starting 1 August 2018.[40]

On 20 August 2018, the Maduro government launched the new sovereign bolívar currency,[41] with Bs.S 1 worth Bs.F 100,000. New coins in denominations of 50 céntimos and Bs.S 1, and new banknotes in denominations of Bs.S 2, Bs.S 5, Bs.S 10, Bs.S 20, Bs.S 50, Bs.S 100, Bs.S 200 and Bs.S 500 were introduced.[42] Under the country's official fixed exchange rate to the US dollar the new currency was devalued by roughly 95% compared to the old hard bolívar.[43] The day was declared a bank holiday to allow the banks to adjust to the new currency.[44] Initially, during a transition period the sovereign bolívar was to be run alongside the hard bolívar.[45] However, from the start of the transition, on 20 August, hard bolívar notes of Bs.F 500 and less could not be used; only deposited at banks.[46]

Concurrently with the release of the new currency, the minimum wage was raised to Bs.S 1,800 per month,[47] a 33-fold increase,[48] and sales tax increased from 12% to 16%.[48]

Additionally, the sovereign bolívar is supposed to have a fixed exchange rate to the petro cryptocurrency, with a rate of Bs.S 3,600 to one petro;[49][50] a peg of petro and sovereign bolívar was announced by Maduro as early as August 2018.[51][52] The petro is supposedly tied to the price of a barrel of oil (about US$60 in August 2018).[49][50] As of the end of August 2018, there is no evidence that the cryptocurrency is being traded.[53] Petro is regarded by many as a scam.[54][53][55]

Following the introduction of the sovereign bolívar, inflation increased from 61,463 percent on 21 August 2018 to 65,320 percent on 22 August 2018.[54] By 24 August 2018, the introduction of the sovereign bolívar had not prevented hyperinflation.[56] According to inflation analyst Steve Hanke, between 18 August and 21 August 2018, the inflation rate increased from 48,760% percent to 65,320%.[27][54] In October 2021, the country will remove six zeroes from its currency while adapting a newer version of the bolivar currency system under a project known as "Digital bolivar".[57][58]

Digital bolívar

A new bolívar, the digital bolívar, was introduced on 1 October 2021 at a rate of Bs.S 1,000,000 to Bs.D 1. This is not a replacement of the sovereign bolívar.[59] The currency has the ISO 4217 currency code "VED".

Currency black market

 
The value of one US dollar in Venezuelan hard bolívares (before 20 August 2018) and sovereign bolívares on the parallel (or black) market through time. Vertical lines represent every time the currency has lost 99% of its value, which has happened five times since 2012. The graph shows that as of October 2021, the currency is worth about 46 billion times less than it was worth in August 2012. Since the beginning of the presidential crisis in Venezuela in January 2019 and the relaxation of currency controls on May of that year, the curve has been less steep than previously, meaning that the rate at which the value is lost, inflation, has slowed down.

The black (or parallel) market value of the hard bolívar and the sovereign bolívar has been significantly lower than the fixed exchange rate and other rates set by the Venezuelan government (SICAD, SIMADI, DICOM). In November 2013, it was almost one-tenth that of the official fixed exchange rate of Bs.F 6.30 per US dollar.[60] In September 2014, the currency black market rate for the hard bolívar reached 100 VEF/USD;[61] on 25 February 2015, it went over 200 VEF/USD.[62] on 7 May 2015, it was over 275 VEF/USD and on 22 September 2015, it was over 730 VEF/USD.[63] Venezuela still had the highest inflation rate in the world in July 2015.[64] By 3 February 2016, this rate reached 1,000 VEF/USD. This rate surpassed 4,300 VEF/USD on 10 December 2016. It surpassed 10,000 VEF/USD on 28 July 2017, and on 7 September 2017, the rate surpassed 20,000 VEF/USD for the first time. Inflation accelerated, and on 1 December 2017, it reached 100,000 VEF/USD for the first time ever. The rate surpassed 200,000 VEF/USD on 18 January 2018, then 500,000 VEF/USD on 16 April, 1 million VEF/USD on 30 May, 2 million VEF/USD on 7 June, and 5 million VEF/USD on 16 August.[5]

At the time of redenomination on 20 August 2018, the exchange rate was 59.21 VES/USD. By the end of the month it reached 87 VES/USD. The rate then surpassed 100 VES/USD on 3 October 2018, 1,000 VES/USD on 9 January 2019, 10,000 VES/USD on 19 July, 100,000 VES/USD on 6 April 2020, and reached the 1,000,000 VES/USD on 23 November 2020. According to DolarToday, the parallel exchange rate was 4,146,022 VES/USD as of 30 August 2021.[5]

Exchange rate history

It is illegal to publish the "parallel exchange rate" in Venezuela.[65] One popular website that has been publishing parallel exchange rates since 2010 is DolarToday, which has also been critical of the Maduro government.[66] This table shows a condensed history of the parallel foreign exchange rate of the Venezuelan bolívar (hard and sovereign) to one United States dollar between 2012 and 2021, according to DolarToday.[67]

Hard bolívar (Bs.F)
Bs.F 1 = Bs. 1,000
Sovereign bolívar (Bs.S)
Bs.S 1 = Bs.F 100,000
Month Exchange rate
August 2012 10
February 2013 20
June 2013 30
September 2013 40
October 2013 50
November 2013 60
January 2014 70
February 2014 80
August 2014 90
September 2014 100
February 2015 200
May 2015 300–400
July 2015 500–600
September 2015 700–800
December 2015 900
February 2016 1,000
October 2016 1,500
November 2016 2,000–4,000
Month Exchange rate
May 2017 5,000–6,000
June 2017 7,000–8,000
July 2017 8,000–11,000
August 2017 11,000–18,000
September 2017 18,000–29,000
October 2017 29,000–41,000
November 2017 41,000–97,000
December 2017 103,000–111,000
January 2018 111,000–236,000
February 2018 214,000–228,000
March 2018 213,000–236,000
April 2018 236,000–621,000
May 2018 621,000–1.3 million
June 2018 1.4–3.4 million
July 2018 3.4–3.6 million
August 2018 3.6–5.9 million
Month Exchange rate
August 2018 59–87
September 2018 87–98
October 2018 99–240
November 2018 240–410
December 2018 410–730
January 2019 730–3,200
February 2019 2,400–3,700
March 2019 3,400–3,700
April 2019 3,700–6,100
May 2019 5,600–6,300
June 2019 6,300–7,900
July 2019 7,800–13,000
August 2019 13,000–26,000
September 2019 20,000–26,000
October 2019 19,000–26,000
November 2019 21,000–42,000
December 2019 40,000–55,000
Month Exchange rate
January 2020 57,300–83,300
February 2020 74,800–77,100
March 2020 71,800–87,400
April 2020 89,200–200,000
May 2020 176,000–206,000
June 195,000–214,000
July 2020 205,000–268,000
August 2020 266,000–345,000
September 2020 346,000–452,000
October 2020 449,000–542,000
November 2020 524,000–950,000
December 2020 940,000–1.2 million
January 2021 1.0–1.8 million
February 2021 1.7–1.9 million
March 2021 1.8–2.1 million
April 2021 2.2–2.9 million
May 2021 2.8–3.2 million
June 2021 3.1–3.3 million
July 2021 3.3–4.1 million
August 2021 4.1–4.2 million

Coins

Bolívar

 
Various Venezuelan coins

In 1879, silver coins were introduced in denominations of Bs. 15, Bs. 12, Bs. 1, Bs. 2, and Bs. 5, together with gold Bs. 20. Gold Bs. 100 were also issued between 1886 and 1889. In 1894, silver Bs. 14 coins were introduced, followed by cupro-nickel 5 and 12+12 céntimos in 1896.

In 1912, production of gold coins ceased, whilst production of the Bs.5 ended in 1936. In 1965, nickel replaced silver in the 25 and 50 céntimos, with the same happening to the 1 and 2 bolívares in 1967. In 1971, cupro-nickel 10 céntimo coins were issued, the 12+12 céntimos having last been issued in 1958. A nickel Bs. 5 was introduced in 1973. Clad steel (first copper, then nickel and cupro-nickel) was used for the 5 céntimos from 1974. Nickel clad steel was introduced for all denominations from 25 céntimos up to 5 bolívares in 1989.

In 1998, after a period of high inflation, a new coinage was introduced in denominations of Bs. 10, Bs. 20, Bs. 50, Bs. 100 and Bs. 500.

The former coins were:

  • Bs. 10
  • Bs. 20
  • Bs. 50
  • Bs. 100
  • Bs. 500
  • Bs. 1,000 (minted 2005, issued late 2006, incorrectly rumoured as recalled due to official Coat of Arms change during the interval)[68]
 
5-venezolano coin

All the coins had the same design. On the obverse the left profile of the Libertador Simón Bolívar is depicted, along with the inscription "Bolívar Libertador" within a heptagon, symbolizing the seven stars of the flag. On the reverse the coat of arms is depicted, circled by the official name of the country, with the date and the denomination below. In 2001, the reverse design was changed, putting the denomination of the coin at the right of the shield of the coat of arms, Semi-Circled by the official name of the country and the year of its emission below.

Hard bolívar

Coins of the hard bolívar were in denominations of 1, 5, 10, 12+12, 25, 50 céntimos, and Bs.F 1. They were quickly rendered obsolete by high inflation. It may be noticed that there was a 12+12-céntimo coin and a 1-céntimo coin, but no 12-céntimo coin. Therefore, giving correct change for a purchase of, say, 4+12 céntimos would require using a 12+12-céntimo coin and getting 8 céntimos back.

2008 Series
Denomination Shape Composition Weight Diameter Edge Obverse Reverse Obverse image Reverse image
1 céntimo Round Copper-plated steel 1.36 g 15 mm Reeded Denomination of the coin, the eight stars and waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission    
5 céntimos Round Copper-plated steel 2.03 g 17 mm Plain Denomination of the coin, the eight stars and waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission    
10 céntimos Round Nickel-plated steel 2.62 g 18 mm Reeded Denomination of the coin, the eight stars and waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission    
12+12 céntimos Round Nickel-plated steel 3.93 g 23 mm Plain Denomination of the coin, the eight stars of the national flag and two palm branches Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission    
25 céntimos Round Nickel-plated steel 3.86 g 20 mm Plain Denomination of the coin, the eight stars and waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission    
50 céntimos Round Nickel-plated steel 4.3 g 22 mm Segmented (Plain and Reeded edges) Denomination of the coin, the eight stars and waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission    
Bs.F 1 [es] Round Copper-Nickel center, Brass ring 8.04 g 24 mm Smooth 'BCV1' Effigy of the Liberator Simón Bolívar, waves representing the patterns of the national flag Denomination of the coin, the eight stars and the waves representing the patterns of the national flag, the Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission    

In December 2016, it was announced that coins of Bs.F 10, Bs.F 50, and Bs.F 100 would enter circulation. These three coins would replace the banknotes of the same denominations.[69]

2016 Series
Denomination Shape Composition Weight Diameter Edge Obverse Reverse Obverse & Reverse image
10 bolívares Round Nickel-plated steel 3.5 g 21.3 mm Smooth Effigy of the Liberator Simón Bolívar, waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission  
50 bolívares Round Nickel-plated steel 5.3 g 23.5 mm Smooth Effigy of the Liberator Simón Bolívar, waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission  
100 bolívares Round Nickel-plated steel 6.5 g 25.5 mm Segmented (Plain and Reeded edges) Effigy of the Liberator Simón Bolívar, waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission  

Sovereign bolívar

Sovereign bolívar coins were announced to be produced in denominations of 50 céntimos and Bs.S 1 (Bs.F 50,000 and Bs.F 100,000 respectively). These two coins were worthless by September 2019.

2018 Series
Denomination Shape Composition Diameter Edge Obverse Reverse Obverse image Reverse image
50 céntimos Round Nickel-plated steel 22 mm Decorated Effigy of the Liberator Simón Bolívar, the eight stars of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela, waves representing the patterns of the national flag and the name of the country of emission    
1 bolívar Round Copper-Nickel center, Brass ring 24 mm - Effigy of the Liberator Simón Bolívar, the eight stars of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela, waves representing the patterns of the national flag and the name of the country of emission    

Banknotes

Bolívar

In 1940, the Banco Central de Venezuela began issuing paper money, introducing denominations of Bs. 10, Bs. 20, Bs. 50, Bs. 100 and Bs. 500. Bs. 5 notes were issued between 1966 and 1974, when they were replaced by coins. In 1989, notes for Bs. 1, Bs. 2 and Bs. 5 were issued.

As inflation took hold, higher denominations of banknotes started being introduced: Bs. 1,000 in 1991, Bs. 2,000 and Bs. 5,000 in 1994, and Bs. 10,000, Bs. 20,000 and Bs. 50,000 in 1998. The first Bs. 20,000 banknotes were made in a green color similar to the one of the Bs. 2,000 banknotes, which caused confusion, and new banknotes were made in a new olive green color.

Starting from 2000, banknotes ranging from Bs. 5,000 to Bs. 50,000 were renamed to REPÚBLICA BOLIVARIANA DE VENEZUELA instead of BANCO CENTRAL DE VENEZUELA on the obverse, after the 1999 constitution was adopted. Moreover, banknotes of Bs. 10,000, Bs. 20,000 and Bs. 50,000 were updated in April 2006 after the National Assembly approved changes to the coat of arms, which were made official on March 12, 2006.

The following is a list of former Venezuelan bolívar banknotes:

Pre-1998 series banknotes (from various series)
Image Denomination Emission Year Obverse Reverse
    5 bolívares 1968 Simón Bolívar and Francisco de Miranda National Pantheon of Venezuela
    10 bolívares 1968 Simón Bolívar and Antonio Jose de Sucre Altar de la Patria, Campo de Carabobo
    20 bolívares 1971 José Antonio Páez Altar de la Patria, Campo de Carabobo
50 bolívares 1971 Andrés Bello Palace of the Academies
100 bolívares 1971 Simón Bolívar Federal Legislative Palace
500 bolívares 1981 Simón Bolívar A branch of orchids
    1,000 bolívares 1991 Simón Bolívar Signing of the Venezuelan Declaration of Independence
    2,000 bolívares 1994 Antonio José de Sucre The Battle of Junín
5,000 bolívares 1994 Simón Bolívar and his coat of arms A reproduction of the painting El 19 de Abril de 1810 by Juan Lovera
1998 Series
[1] [2] 1,000 bolívares 1998 Simón Bolívar A picture of National Pantheon in Caracas
[3] [4] 2,000 bolívares 1998 Andrés Bello A picture of frailejones and a view of the Pico Bolívar
[5] [6] 10,000 bolívares 1998 Simón Bolívar Teresa Carreño Cultural Complex, Caracas
[7] [8] 20,000 bolívares 1998 Simón Rodríguez and the Angel Falls in the background A blue-and-yellow macaw and the Angel Falls
[9] [10] 50,000 bolívares 1998 José María Vargas Central University of Venezuela, Caracas
2000 Series
"REPÚBLICA BOLIVARIANA DE VENEZUELA"
[11] [12] 5,000 bolívares 2000 Francisco de Miranda Picture of two angelfishes and a panorama of the Guri Dam.
[13] [14] 10,000 bolívares 2000 Antonio José de Sucre A Marpesia petreus butterfly and the Supreme Tribunal of Justice
[15] [16] 20,000 bolívares 2001 Simón Rodríguez and the Angel Falls in the background A blue-and-yellow macaw and the Angel Falls
[17] [18] 50,000 bolívares 2005 José María Vargas Central University of Venezuela, Caracas

Hard bolívar

2008–2016 ("2007")

New banknotes of the series 2007–2015 with values of Bs.F 2 to Bs.F 100 were issued from 20 March 2007 until 5 November 2015 and became legal tender from 1 January 2008 to 20 August 2018. The greater the values, the longer re-issuing occurred. Only the Bs.F 50 and Bs.F 100 notes were re-issued in November 2015.

  • Bs.F 2: March 20, 2007 to October 29, 2013
  • Bs.F 5: March 20, 2007 to August 19, 2014
  • Bs.F 10: March 20, 2007 to August 19, 2014
  • Bs.F 20: March 20, 2007 to August 19, 2014
  • Bs.F 50: March 20, 2007 to November 5, 2015[70]
  • Bs.F 100: March 20, 2007 to November 5, 2015[70]

The obverse side is portrait-oriented, with the lower half carrying a portrait, while the reverse side is landscape-oriented, the left two thirds showing an animal in front of its habitat.

Re-issues retain the value-specific motifs, but the printing quality is different. The notes are printed by Casa de la Moneda Venezuela in Venezuela.[70]

2008 Series
Denomination Value in Bs.
(1879-2007)
Emission Year Size (millimeters) Obverse Reverse Image
Bs.F 2 2,000 2007 156 × 69 Francisco de Miranda Orinoco River Dolphins (Inia geoffrensis) with Coro Dunes in background; Gusano flower
Bs.F 5 5,000 2007 Pedro Camejo Giant armadillo (Priodontes maximus) with the Llanos plains in the background
Bs.F 10 10,000 2007 Cacique Guaicaipuro American harpy eagle (Harpia harpyja) with the Ucaima Falls at Canaima National Park in the background
Bs.F 20 20,000 2007 Luisa Cáceres de Arismendi Hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata) with Macanao Mountain in the background
Bs.F 50 50,000 2007 Simón Rodríguez Spectacled bear (Tremarctos ornatos) with Laguna Santo Cristo at Sierra Nevada National Park in the background
Bs.F 100 100,000 2007 Simón Bolívar Red siskin (Carduelis cucullata) with Cerro El Ávila at El Ávila National Park in the background

2016–17

Venezuelans lining up at the Banco de Venezuela branch in Chacao to deposit the Bs.F 100 note after President Maduro withdrew it from circulation.

High inflation, which was a part of Venezuela's economic collapse, caused the hard bolívar's value to plummet. The Bs.F 2 and Bs.F 5 notes were no longer found in circulation due to the hyperinflation, but remained legal tender. By December 2016, the Bs.F 100 note, the largest denomination, was only worth about US$0.23 on the black market.[71]

On 7 December 2016, a new series of banknotes (recolors of the previous notes) in denominations of Bs.F 500, Bs.F 1,000, Bs.F 2,000, Bs.F 5,000, Bs.F 10,000, and Bs.F 20,000 were unveiled to the Venezuelan public.[69][71] Days later on 11 December, President Nicolás Maduro who had been ruling by decree wrote into law that the Bs.F 100 would be pulled from circulation within 72 hours because "mafias" were allegedly storing those particular notes to drive inflation.[72] With more than 6 billion Bs.F 100 notes issued consisting of 46% of Venezuela's issued currency, Maduro enacted an exchange for Venezuelan citizens to transfer all Bs.F 100 notes for Bs.F 100 coins while also blocking international travel to prevent the return of the bolívares that were supposedly stockpiled.[72][73] The government justified the move claiming that the United States was working with crime syndicates to spirit away Venezuela's paper money to warehouses in Europe to cause the fall of the government. The government was thwarting this threat by withdrawing the notes from circulation.[74] On 14 February 2017, Paraguayan authorities uncovered a 30-tonne stash of Bs.F 50 and Bs.F 100 notes totaling Bs.F 1.5 billion on its Brazilian border that had not yet been circulated.[75] According to a United States Department of Defense adviser linked to The Pentagon, the Bs.F 1.5 billion was printed by Venezuela and destined for Bolivia, since unlike the implied exchange rate of thousands of hard bolívares equaling one United States dollar, the exchange rate was approximately 10 hard bolívares per dollar, making the value of the stash 419 times stronger, from US$358,000 to US$150 million.[75] The Pentagon adviser further stated that the Venezuelan government tried to send the newly printed notes to be exchanged by the Bolivian government so Bolivia could pay 20% of its debt to Venezuela, and so Venezuela could use the US dollars for its own disposal.[75]

On 3 November 2017, the Banco Central de Venezuela issued a Bs.F 100,000 note which is similar to the Bs.F 100 note of the 2007 series and the Bs.F 20,000 of the 2016 series, but with the denomination spelled out in full instead of adding an additional three zeros to the number 100. This denomination was worth US$2.42 using the unofficial exchange rate at the date of its release.

New banknotes of the 2016–17 series with values of Bs.F 500 to Bs.F 100,000 were issued from 7 December 2016 until 20 August 2018, the day when the sovereign bolívar was introduced. Notes from Bs.F 5,000 to Bs.F 100,000 were recently re-issued in December 2017.

  • Bs.F 500: August 18, 2016 to March 23, 2017
  • Bs.F 1,000: August 18, 2016 to March 23, 2017
  • Bs.F 2,000: August 18, 2016
  • Bs.F 5,000: August 18, 2016 to December 13, 2017
  • Bs.F 10,000: August 18, 2016 to December 13, 2017
  • Bs.F 20,000: August 18, 2016 to December 13, 2017
  • Bs.F 100,000: September 7, 2017 to December 13, 2017,

Maduro has announced that after the currency redenomination has carried out on 20 August 2018, these old denominations with a face value of 1,000 hard bolívares or higher will circulate in parallel with the new series of sovereign bolívar notes and will continue to be used for a limited time.[76] Banknotes with a face value below BsF. 1,000 were withdrawn from circulation and ceased to be legal tender on 20 August 2018. They have to be deposited in local banks.[77][78]

2016-17 Series
Denomination Value in Bs.S
20 Aug - 4 Dec 2018
Emission Year Obverse Reverse
Bs.F 500 Bs.S 0.005 2016 Francisco de Miranda Orinoco River Dolphins (Inia geoffrensis) with Coro Dunes in background; Gusano flower
Bs.F 1,000 Bs.S 0.01 2016 Pedro Camejo Giant armadillo (Priodontes maximus) with the Llanos plains in the background
Bs.F 2,000 Bs.S 0.02 2016 Cacique Guaicaipuro American harpy eagle (Harpia harpyja) with the Ucaima Falls at Canaima National Park in the background
Bs.F 5,000 Bs.S 0.05 2016 Luisa Cáceres de Arismendi Hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata) with Macanao Mountain in the background
Bs.F 10,000 Bs.S 0.10 2016 Simón Rodríguez Spectacled bear (Tremarctos ornatos) with Laguna Santo Cristo at Sierra Nevada National Park in the background
Bs.F 20,000 Bs.S 0.20 2016 Simón Bolívar Red siskin (Carduelis cucullata) with Cerro El Ávila at El Ávila National Park in the background
Bs.F 100,000 Bs.S 1 2017 Simón Bolívar Red siskin (Carduelis cucullata) with Cerro El Ávila at El Ávila National Park in the background

2018

By May 2018, the hard bolívar's banknotes represented very little value and they had become in short supply.[79] Weighing scales could no longer convert mass to price and receipts could no longer fit the numbers on their paper.[80]

In June 2018, seven months after its release, the value of the Bs.F 100,000 note (largest denomination), had its value reduced by 98%, from US$2.42 (in November 2017) to US$0.05, as a result of increasing hyperinflation.

The lower denomination hard bolívar banknotes (up to Bs.F 500) were demonetized on 20 August 2018; with the introduction of the sovereign bolívar. Higher denominations (Bs.F 1,000 and above) remained legal tender during a transition period. On 30 November 2018, it was announced that the remaining denominations of the old currency will be withdrawn from circulation and cease to be legal tender on 5 December 2018.[81]

Sovereign bolívar

2018

On 22 March 2018, with a declared state of emergency, a redenomination of the currency was announced.[82] The conversion from hard bolívar to sovereign bolívar banknotes officially occurred on 20 August 2018, with new denominations of Bs.S 2, Bs.S 5, Bs.S 10, Bs.S 20, Bs.S 50, Bs.S 100, Bs.S 200, and Bs.S 500.[83] Four months after entry into circulation, shops and state banks began refusing the Bs.S 2, as its value had significantly declined since the redenomination.[84][85] By November 2019, except for the Bs.S 500, all notes issued in 2018 were worthless.

2018 Series
Denomination Value in Bs.F Emission Year Obverse Reverse
2 bolívares 200,000 2018 Josefa Camejo Yellow-crowned amazon parrot (Amazona ochrocephala) with the Morrocoy National Park in the background
5 bolívares 500,000 2018 José Felix Ribas
(portrait by Martín Tovar y Tovar)
Atelopus cruciger with the Henri Pittier National Park in the background
10 bolívares 1,000,000 2018 Rafael Urdaneta Giant anteater (Myrmecophaga tridactyla) with the Catatumbo lightning in the background
20 bolívares 2,000,000 2018 Simón Rodríguez Jaguar (Panthera onca) with the Waraira Repano National Park in the background
50 bolívares 5,000,000 2018 Antonio José de Sucre Cunaguaro (Leopardus tigrinus) with the Península de Paria National Park in the background
100 bolívares 10,000,000 2018 Ezequiel Zamora Brown spider monkey (Ateles hybridus) with the Guatopo National Park in the background
200 bolívares 20,000,000 2018 Francisco de Miranda Military macaw (Ara militaris) with the Waraira Repano National Park in the background
500 bolívares 50,000,000 2018 Simón Bolívar Venezuelan troupial (Icterus icterus) with the Macarao National Park in the background

2019

Further inflation since the soberano redenomination resulted in the creation of Bs.S 10,000, Bs.S 20,000 and Bs.S 50,000 banknotes in June 2019.[86] Not mentioning inflation, the Central Bank of Venezuela said the introduction of the new banknotes would "complement and optimize" the monetary system and that their purpose was to make payment systems "more efficient".[87] On 23 April 2020, the exchange rate per xe.com was US$1 = 144,697.34 VES; the following day, the rate slid to US$1 = Bs.S 171,140.42.

Banknotes with a narrow segmented security thread were printed by Goznak, those with a wider one were printed elsewhere.

2019 Series
Image Denomination Value in Bs.D Emission Year Obverse Reverse
[88] 10,000 bolívares 0.01 2019 Simón Bolívar "Mausoleum of the Liberator" Simón Bolívar
[89] 20,000 bolívares 0.02 2019 Simón Bolívar "Mausoleum of the Liberator" Simón Bolívar
[90] 50,000 bolívares 0.05 2019 Simón Bolívar "Mausoleum of the Liberator" Simón Bolívar

2020

As of December 2020, the highest denomination banknote (Bs.S 50,000) was worth less than US$0.05[91] and the minimum wage is Bs.S 1,200,000 (about US$1) per month.[92] By September 2020, all sovereign bolivar banknotes (Bs.S 2 to Bs.S 500) issued on 20 August 2018 were deemed worthless. Venezuelan officials are planning a new Bs.S 100,000 note.[93] Meanwhile, as of 16 December 2020, the exchange rate was over 1 million bolivares to one US dollar.[94]

2021

On 5 March 2021, the Central Bank of Venezuela introduced 3 new denominations: Bs.S 200,000, Bs.S 500,000 and Bs.S 1,000,000 which were made available to the general public on 8 March 2021.[95] The Bs.S 1,000,000 note was only worth US$0.52 at the time of the announcement.[96]

By late May 2021 the exchange rate had risen to over 3 million sovereign bolívares to one US dollar.[94]

According to a July 2021 Bloomberg article, Venezuela plans to redenominate the bolívar at a ratio of 1,000,000:1 in August 2021, effectively removing six zeros from the denominations. The current largest denomination banknote is 1,000,000 bolívares, expressed on the note with a predominant 1 followed by the descriptive millón de bolívares. It is therefore likely that the bank intends to retain the bolívar currency name while reusing the existing note designs.[97]

2021 Series
Image Denomination Value in Bs.D Emission Year Obverse Reverse
[98] 200,000 bolívares 0.20 2020 Simón Bolívar "Mausoleum of the Liberator" Simón Bolívar
[99] 500,000 bolívares 0.50 2020 Simón Bolívar "Mausoleum of the Liberator" Simón Bolívar
[100] 1,000,000 bolívares 1.00 2020 Simón Bolívar Entrance to the Monument to the Motherland on Carabobo Fields; Battle of Carabobo

Digital bolívar

Banknotes of 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 digital bolívares were introduced in 2021,[101] all bearing similar motifs but different colors.

Digital bolívar banknotes
Image Denomination Emission Year Color Obverse Reverse
5 bolívares 2021 brown Simón Bolívar Entrance to the Monument to the Motherland on Carabobo Fields; Battle of Carabobo
10 bolívares blue-violet
20 bolívares orange
50 bolívares green
100 bolívares red-violet
Current VED exchange rates
From Google Finance: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD INR EUR JPY
From Yahoo! Finance: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD INR EUR JPY
From XE.com: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD INR EUR JPY
From OANDA: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD INR EUR JPY

Notes

  1. ^ Despite the name, banknotes and coins for the currencies were issued, and the Financial Times described it as "no more digital than any other currency".[8]

See also

References

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Bibliography

External links

  • Current Legal Banknotes Venezuela
  • Banknotes of Venezuela Gallery
  • Numismatic Catalog of Venezuela
  • (in Spanish)
  • Currency Reconversion Calculator Bolívar Soberano to Bolívar Digital

venezuelan, bolívar, bolívar, boˈliβaɾ, official, currency, venezuela, named, after, hero, latin, american, independence, simón, bolívar, introduced, following, monetary, reform, 1879, before, which, venezolano, circulating, decades, long, reliance, silver, go. The bolivar boˈlibaɾ is the official currency of Venezuela Named after the hero of Latin American independence Simon Bolivar it was introduced following the monetary reform in 1879 before which the venezolano was circulating Due to its decades long reliance on silver and gold standards and then on a peg to the United States dollar it was considered among the most stable currencies and was internationally accepted until 1964 when the government decided to adopt a floating exchange rate instead Venezuelan bolivarbolivar venezolano Spanish ISO 4217CodeVED numeric 926 VES numeric 928 ISO 4217 Standard definition Data Standards ISO 4217 Currency Code Maintenance Get the Correct Currency Code www six group com SIX Group 2022 10 01 List One Currency fund and precious metal codes XLS www six group com SIX Group 2022 09 23 List Two Fund codes registered with the Maintenance Agency XLS www six group com SIX Group 2018 08 29 List Three Codes for historic denominations of currencies and funds XLS www six group com SIX Group 2018 08 22 Overview Amendments XLSX www six group com SIX Group 2022 09 23 Subunit0 01UnitUnitbolivarPluralbolivaresSymbolBs 1 or Bs DNicknamebolo s luca s real es DenominationsSubunit 1 100centimoBanknotesVED series Bs 5 Bs 10 Bs 20 Bs 50 Bs 100Coins25 50 centimos Bs 1DemographicsUser s VenezuelaIssuanceCentral bankBanco Central de Venezuela Websitewww wbr bcv wbr org wbr veValuationInflation114 10 2022 2 3 4 ValueOfficial rateUS 1 Bs 24 65 Apr 24 2023 1 Parallel rateUS 1 Bs 20 72 Jan 11 2023 5 Since 1983 the currency has experienced a prolonged period of high inflation losing value almost 500 fold against the US dollar in the process The depreciation became manageable in the mid 2000s but it still stayed in double digits 6 It was then on 1 January 2008 that the hard bolivar bolivar fuerte in Spanish sign Bs F code VEF replaced the original bolivar sign Bs code VEB at a rate of Bs F 1 to Bs 1 000 1 7 the abbreviation Bs is due to the first and the final letters of the plural form of the currency s name bolivares The value of the hard bolivar pegged to the US dollar did not stay stable for long despite attempts to institute capital controls Venezuela entered another period of abnormally high inflation in 2012 which the country hasn t exited as of April 2023 update The central bank stuck to the pegged subsidised exchange rate until January 2018 which was overpriced so people began using parallel exchange rates despite a ban on publishing them From 2016 to 2019 and again in 2020 the currency experienced hyperinflation for a total period of 38 months 8 The rampant inflation prompted two redenominations The first occurred in August 2018 when Bs F 100 000 were exchanged for 1 sovereign bolivar bolivar soberano in Spanish sign Bs S code VES 9 and another one happened on 1 October 2021 but called Nueva expresion monetaria or new monetary expression which removes 6 zeros from the currency without affecting its denomination but did introduce a new ISO code 10 a at a rate of Bs S 1 000 000 Bs D 1 11 thus making Bs D 1 worth Bs 100 000 000 000 000 1014 or Bs 100 trillion in short scale Both currencies are in circulation 12 though the economy has undergone extensive currency substitution so the majority of transactions happen in US dollars or to a lesser extent the Colombian peso 8 11 13 Contents 1 History 1 1 Bolivar 1 2 Hard bolivar 1 3 Sovereign bolivar 1 4 Digital bolivar 2 Currency black market 2 1 Exchange rate history 3 Coins 3 1 Bolivar 3 2 Hard bolivar 3 3 Sovereign bolivar 4 Banknotes 4 1 Bolivar 4 2 Hard bolivar 4 2 1 2008 2016 2007 4 2 2 2016 17 4 2 3 2018 4 3 Sovereign bolivar 4 3 1 2018 4 3 2 2019 4 3 3 2020 4 3 4 2021 4 4 Digital bolivar 5 Notes 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory EditBolivar Edit Bolivar Preceded by VenezolanoReason unification of circulating currenciesRatio 1 5 venezolano 1 bolivar Currency of Venezuela 31 March 1879 31 December 2007 Succeeded by Hard bolivarReason inflationRatio 1000 bolivares 1 hard bolivar Venezuelan bolivarbolivar Spanish ISO 4217CodeVEBUnitPluralbolivaresSymbolBs DenominationsSubunit 1 100centimoPlural centimocentimosBanknotesBs 1 000 Bs 2 000 Bs 5 000 Bs 10 000 Bs 20 000 Bs 50 000CoinsBs 10 Bs 20 Bs 50 Bs 100 Bs 500 Bs 1 000DemographicsUser s VenezuelaIssuanceCentral bankBanco Central de Venezuela Websitewww wbr bcv wbr org wbr veThis infobox shows the latest status before this currency was rendered obsolete The bolivar is named after the hero of Latin American independence Simon Bolivar The bolivar was adopted by the monetary law of 1879 replacing the short lived venezolano at a rate of five bolivares to one venezolano Initially the bolivar was defined on the silver standard equal to 4 5 g fine silver following the principles of the Latin Monetary Union The monetary law of 1887 made the gold bolivar unlimited legal tender and the gold standard came into full operation in 1910 Venezuela went off gold in 1930 and in 1934 the bolivar exchange rate was fixed in terms of the US dollar at a rate of Bs 3 914 US 1 revalued to Bs 3 18 1 US dollar in 1937 a rate which lasted until 1941 Until 18 February 1983 now called Viernes Negro es Spanish for Black Friday by many Venezuelans 14 the bolivar had been the region s most stable and internationally accepted currency It then fell prey to high devaluation Exchange controls were imposed on February 5 2003 to limit capital flight 15 The rate was pegged to the US dollar at a fixed exchange rate of Bs 1 600 to the dollar Hard bolivar Edit Hard bolivar Preceded by BolivarReason inflationRatio 1000 bolivares 1 hard bolivar Currency of Venezuela 1 January 2008 20 August 2018 Succeeded by Sovereign bolivarReason hyperinflationRatio 100 000 hard bolivares 1 sovereign bolivarVenezuelan hard bolivar 16 bolivar fuerte Spanish ISO 4217CodeVEFUnitPluralbolivares fuertesSymbolBs F or Bs Nicknamebolo s luca s real es DenominationsSubunit 1 100centimoBanknotes Freq usedBs F 1 000 Bs F 2 000 Bs F 5 000 Bs F 10 000 Bs F 20 000 Bs F 100 000 1 Rarely usedBs F 2 Bs F 5 Bs F 10 Bs F 20 Bs F 50 Bs F 100 Bs F 500Coins Rarely usedBs F 1 Bs F 10 Bs F 50 and Bs F 100 1 DemographicsUser s VenezuelaIssuanceCentral bankBanco Central de Venezuela Websitewww wbr bcv wbr org wbr veValuationInflation 80 000 2018 est 17 Pegged withUS 1 BsF 248 832 Dicom auction 1 see this section for parallel market rate 18 This infobox shows the latest status before this currency was rendered obsolete Coins and low value banknotes were rendered obsolete by hyperinflation The government announced on 7 March 2007 that the bolivar would be redenominated at a ratio of 1 000 to 1 on 1 January 2008 and renamed the bolivar fuerte or hard bolivar in an effort to facilitate the ease of transaction and accounting 19 The newer name literally means hard bolivar as in hard currency and in reference to an old coin called the peso fuerte worth 10 Spanish reales 20 The alternate meaning of strong was also used by the government in promotional material 21 22 The official exchange rate is restricted to individuals by CADIVI which imposes an annual limit on the amount available for travel Inflation represented by the time it would take in years for money to lose 90 of its value 301 day rolling average inverted logarithmic scale Since the government of Hugo Chavez established strict currency controls in 2003 there have been a series of five currency devaluations disrupting the economy 23 On 8 January 2010 the value was changed by the government from the fixed exchange rate of Bs F 2 15 to Bs F 2 60 for some imports certain foods and healthcare goods and Bs F 4 30 for other imports like cars petrochemicals and electronics 24 On 4 January 2011 the fixed exchange rate became Bs F 4 30 for US 1 00 for both sides of the economy On 13 February 2013 the hard bolivar was devalued to Bs F 6 30 per US 1 in an attempt to counter budget deficits 25 On 18 February 2016 President Maduro used his newly granted economic powers to devalue the official exchange rate of the hard bolivar from Bs F 6 30 per US 1 to Bs F 10 per US 1 which is a 37 depreciation against the US dollar 26 The hard bolivar entered hyperinflation in November 2016 27 On January 26 2018 the government retired the protected and subsidized Bs F 10 per US 1 exchange rate that was highly overvalued as a result of rampant inflation 28 On February 5 2018 the Central Bank of Venezuela announced a 99 6 sic devaluation with the exchange rate going to Bs F 25 000 per US This made the hard bolivar the second least valued circulating currency in the world based on the official exchange rate behind only the Iranian rial and between September 2017 and August 2018 according to the informal exchange rate the hard bolivar was the least valued circulating currency unit in the world 29 dubious discuss The official exchange rate stood at Bs F 248 832 to US 1 as of August 10 2018 making it the least valued circulating currency in the world based on official exchange rates 30 In June 2018 the government authorized a new exchange rate for buying but not selling currency On August 13 2018 the rate was Bs F 4 010 000 to US 1 according to ZOOM Remesas 31 Sovereign bolivar Edit Sovereign bolivar Preceded by Hard bolivarReason hyperinflationRatio 100 000 hard bolivares 1 sovereign bolivar Currency of Venezuela 20 August 2018 Venezuelan bolivarbolivar venezolano Spanish ISO 4217CodeVES numeric 928 Subunit0 01UnitPluralbolivaresSymbolBs or Bs S Nicknamebolo s luca s real es DenominationsSubunit 1 100centimoBanknotesVES series Bs S 10 000 Bs S 20 000 Bs S 50 000 Bs S 200 000 Bs S 500 000 Bs S 1 000 000DemographicsUser s VenezuelaIssuanceCentral bankBanco Central de Venezuela Websitewww wbr bcv wbr org wbr veValuationInflation 4 355 5 713 2020 32 33 34 ValueOfficial rateUS 1 Bs D 4 34 Mar 25 2022 1 Parallel rateUS 1 Bs D 4 43 Mar 25 2022 5 On 22 March 2018 President Nicolas Maduro announced a new monetary reform program with a planned revaluation of the currency at a ratio of 1 000 to 1 35 The change was to be made effective from 4 June 2018 36 37 In May 2018 the government required prices to be expressed in both hard bolivares and sovereign bolivares at the then planned rate of 1 000 to 1 For example one kilogram of pasta was shown with a price of Bs F 695 000 and Bs S 695 Prices expressed in the new currency were rounded to the nearest 50 centimos as that was expected to be the lowest denomination in circulation at launch The rounding created difficulties because some items and sales qualities were priced at significantly less than Bs S 0 50 for example a litre of gasoline and a Caracas Metro ticket typically cost Bs S 0 06 and Bs S 0 04 respectively 38 source President Nicolas Maduro announcing the redenomination of the Venezuelan bolivar on 17 August 2018 The change in currency was originally scheduled for June 4 2018 The President delayed the planned June launch date of the sovereign bolivar citing from Aristides Maza the period established to carry out the conversion is not enough 39 The revaluation was rescheduled to 20 August 2018 and the rate changed to 100 000 to 1 with prices being required to be expressed at the new rate starting 1 August 2018 40 On 20 August 2018 the Maduro government launched the new sovereign bolivar currency 41 with Bs S 1 worth Bs F 100 000 New coins in denominations of 50 centimos and Bs S 1 and new banknotes in denominations of Bs S 2 Bs S 5 Bs S 10 Bs S 20 Bs S 50 Bs S 100 Bs S 200 and Bs S 500 were introduced 42 Under the country s official fixed exchange rate to the US dollar the new currency was devalued by roughly 95 compared to the old hard bolivar 43 The day was declared a bank holiday to allow the banks to adjust to the new currency 44 Initially during a transition period the sovereign bolivar was to be run alongside the hard bolivar 45 However from the start of the transition on 20 August hard bolivar notes of Bs F 500 and less could not be used only deposited at banks 46 Concurrently with the release of the new currency the minimum wage was raised to Bs S 1 800 per month 47 a 33 fold increase 48 and sales tax increased from 12 to 16 48 Additionally the sovereign bolivar is supposed to have a fixed exchange rate to the petro cryptocurrency with a rate of Bs S 3 600 to one petro 49 50 a peg of petro and sovereign bolivar was announced by Maduro as early as August 2018 51 52 The petro is supposedly tied to the price of a barrel of oil about US 60 in August 2018 49 50 As of the end of August 2018 there is no evidence that the cryptocurrency is being traded 53 Petro is regarded by many as a scam 54 53 55 Following the introduction of the sovereign bolivar inflation increased from 61 463 percent on 21 August 2018 to 65 320 percent on 22 August 2018 54 By 24 August 2018 the introduction of the sovereign bolivar had not prevented hyperinflation 56 According to inflation analyst Steve Hanke between 18 August and 21 August 2018 the inflation rate increased from 48 760 percent to 65 320 27 54 In October 2021 the country will remove six zeroes from its currency while adapting a newer version of the bolivar currency system under a project known as Digital bolivar 57 58 Digital bolivar Edit A new bolivar the digital bolivar was introduced on 1 October 2021 at a rate of Bs S 1 000 000 to Bs D 1 This is not a replacement of the sovereign bolivar 59 The currency has the ISO 4217 currency code VED Currency black market Edit The value of one US dollar in Venezuelan hard bolivares before 20 August 2018 and sovereign bolivares on the parallel or black market through time Vertical lines represent every time the currency has lost 99 of its value which has happened five times since 2012 The graph shows that as of October 2021 the currency is worth about 46 billion times less than it was worth in August 2012 Since the beginning of the presidential crisis in Venezuela in January 2019 and the relaxation of currency controls on May of that year the curve has been less steep than previously meaning that the rate at which the value is lost inflation has slowed down The black or parallel market value of the hard bolivar and the sovereign bolivar has been significantly lower than the fixed exchange rate and other rates set by the Venezuelan government SICAD SIMADI DICOM In November 2013 it was almost one tenth that of the official fixed exchange rate of Bs F 6 30 per US dollar 60 In September 2014 the currency black market rate for the hard bolivar reached 100 VEF USD 61 on 25 February 2015 it went over 200 VEF USD 62 on 7 May 2015 it was over 275 VEF USD and on 22 September 2015 it was over 730 VEF USD 63 Venezuela still had the highest inflation rate in the world in July 2015 64 By 3 February 2016 this rate reached 1 000 VEF USD This rate surpassed 4 300 VEF USD on 10 December 2016 It surpassed 10 000 VEF USD on 28 July 2017 and on 7 September 2017 the rate surpassed 20 000 VEF USD for the first time Inflation accelerated and on 1 December 2017 it reached 100 000 VEF USD for the first time ever The rate surpassed 200 000 VEF USD on 18 January 2018 then 500 000 VEF USD on 16 April 1 million VEF USD on 30 May 2 million VEF USD on 7 June and 5 million VEF USD on 16 August 5 At the time of redenomination on 20 August 2018 the exchange rate was 59 21 VES USD By the end of the month it reached 87 VES USD The rate then surpassed 100 VES USD on 3 October 2018 1 000 VES USD on 9 January 2019 10 000 VES USD on 19 July 100 000 VES USD on 6 April 2020 and reached the 1 000 000 VES USD on 23 November 2020 According to DolarToday the parallel exchange rate was 4 146 022 VES USD as of 30 August 2021 5 Exchange rate history Edit It is illegal to publish the parallel exchange rate in Venezuela 65 One popular website that has been publishing parallel exchange rates since 2010 is DolarToday which has also been critical of the Maduro government 66 This table shows a condensed history of the parallel foreign exchange rate of the Venezuelan bolivar hard and sovereign to one United States dollar between 2012 and 2021 according to DolarToday 67 Hard bolivar Bs F Bs F 1 Bs 1 000 Sovereign bolivar Bs S Bs S 1 Bs F 100 000Month Exchange rateAugust 2012 10February 2013 20June 2013 30September 2013 40October 2013 50November 2013 60January 2014 70February 2014 80August 2014 90September 2014 100February 2015 200May 2015 300 400July 2015 500 600September 2015 700 800December 2015 900February 2016 1 000October 2016 1 500November 2016 2 000 4 000 Month Exchange rateMay 2017 5 000 6 000June 2017 7 000 8 000July 2017 8 000 11 000August 2017 11 000 18 000September 2017 18 000 29 000October 2017 29 000 41 000November 2017 41 000 97 000December 2017 103 000 111 000January 2018 111 000 236 000February 2018 214 000 228 000March 2018 213 000 236 000April 2018 236 000 621 000May 2018 621 000 1 3 millionJune 2018 1 4 3 4 millionJuly 2018 3 4 3 6 millionAugust 2018 3 6 5 9 million Month Exchange rateAugust 2018 59 87September 2018 87 98October 2018 99 240November 2018 240 410December 2018 410 730January 2019 730 3 200February 2019 2 400 3 700March 2019 3 400 3 700April 2019 3 700 6 100May 2019 5 600 6 300June 2019 6 300 7 900July 2019 7 800 13 000August 2019 13 000 26 000September 2019 20 000 26 000October 2019 19 000 26 000November 2019 21 000 42 000December 2019 40 000 55 000 Month Exchange rateJanuary 2020 57 300 83 300February 2020 74 800 77 100March 2020 71 800 87 400April 2020 89 200 200 000May 2020 176 000 206 000June 195 000 214 000July 2020 205 000 268 000August 2020 266 000 345 000September 2020 346 000 452 000October 2020 449 000 542 000November 2020 524 000 950 000December 2020 940 000 1 2 millionJanuary 2021 1 0 1 8 millionFebruary 2021 1 7 1 9 millionMarch 2021 1 8 2 1 millionApril 2021 2 2 2 9 millionMay 2021 2 8 3 2 millionJune 2021 3 1 3 3 millionJuly 2021 3 3 4 1 millionAugust 2021 4 1 4 2 millionCoins EditBolivar Edit Various Venezuelan coins In 1879 silver coins were introduced in denominations of Bs 1 5 Bs 1 2 Bs 1 Bs 2 and Bs 5 together with gold Bs 20 Gold Bs 100 were also issued between 1886 and 1889 In 1894 silver Bs 1 4 coins were introduced followed by cupro nickel 5 and 12 1 2 centimos in 1896 In 1912 production of gold coins ceased whilst production of the Bs 5 ended in 1936 In 1965 nickel replaced silver in the 25 and 50 centimos with the same happening to the 1 and 2 bolivares in 1967 In 1971 cupro nickel 10 centimo coins were issued the 12 1 2 centimos having last been issued in 1958 A nickel Bs 5 was introduced in 1973 Clad steel first copper then nickel and cupro nickel was used for the 5 centimos from 1974 Nickel clad steel was introduced for all denominations from 25 centimos up to 5 bolivares in 1989 In 1998 after a period of high inflation a new coinage was introduced in denominations of Bs 10 Bs 20 Bs 50 Bs 100 and Bs 500 The former coins were Bs 10 Bs 20 Bs 50 Bs 100 Bs 500 Bs 1 000 minted 2005 issued late 2006 incorrectly rumoured as recalled due to official Coat of Arms change during the interval 68 5 venezolano coin All the coins had the same design On the obverse the left profile of the Libertador Simon Bolivar is depicted along with the inscription Bolivar Libertador within a heptagon symbolizing the seven stars of the flag On the reverse the coat of arms is depicted circled by the official name of the country with the date and the denomination below In 2001 the reverse design was changed putting the denomination of the coin at the right of the shield of the coat of arms Semi Circled by the official name of the country and the year of its emission below Hard bolivar Edit Coins of the hard bolivar were in denominations of 1 5 10 12 1 2 25 50 centimos and Bs F 1 They were quickly rendered obsolete by high inflation It may be noticed that there was a 12 1 2 centimo coin and a 1 centimo coin but no 1 2 centimo coin Therefore giving correct change for a purchase of say 4 1 2 centimos would require using a 12 1 2 centimo coin and getting 8 centimos back 2008 SeriesDenomination Shape Composition Weight Diameter Edge Obverse Reverse Obverse image Reverse image1 centimo Round Copper plated steel 1 36 g 15 mm Reeded Denomination of the coin the eight stars and waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission 5 centimos Round Copper plated steel 2 03 g 17 mm Plain Denomination of the coin the eight stars and waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission 10 centimos Round Nickel plated steel 2 62 g 18 mm Reeded Denomination of the coin the eight stars and waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission 12 1 2 centimos Round Nickel plated steel 3 93 g 23 mm Plain Denomination of the coin the eight stars of the national flag and two palm branches Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission 25 centimos Round Nickel plated steel 3 86 g 20 mm Plain Denomination of the coin the eight stars and waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission 50 centimos Round Nickel plated steel 4 3 g 22 mm Segmented Plain and Reeded edges Denomination of the coin the eight stars and waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission Bs F 1 es Round Copper Nickel center Brass ring 8 04 g 24 mm Smooth BCV1 Effigy of the Liberator Simon Bolivar waves representing the patterns of the national flag Denomination of the coin the eight stars and the waves representing the patterns of the national flag the Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission In December 2016 it was announced that coins of Bs F 10 Bs F 50 and Bs F 100 would enter circulation These three coins would replace the banknotes of the same denominations 69 2016 SeriesDenomination Shape Composition Weight Diameter Edge Obverse Reverse Obverse amp Reverse image10 bolivares Round Nickel plated steel 3 5 g 21 3 mm Smooth Effigy of the Liberator Simon Bolivar waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission 50 bolivares Round Nickel plated steel 5 3 g 23 5 mm Smooth Effigy of the Liberator Simon Bolivar waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission 100 bolivares Round Nickel plated steel 6 5 g 25 5 mm Segmented Plain and Reeded edges Effigy of the Liberator Simon Bolivar waves representing the patterns of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela and the name of the country of emission Sovereign bolivar Edit Sovereign bolivar coins were announced to be produced in denominations of 50 centimos and Bs S 1 Bs F 50 000 and Bs F 100 000 respectively These two coins were worthless by September 2019 2018 SeriesDenomination Shape Composition Diameter Edge Obverse Reverse Obverse image Reverse image50 centimos Round Nickel plated steel 22 mm Decorated Effigy of the Liberator Simon Bolivar the eight stars of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela waves representing the patterns of the national flag and the name of the country of emission 1 bolivar Round Copper Nickel center Brass ring 24 mm Effigy of the Liberator Simon Bolivar the eight stars of the national flag Coat of arms of Venezuela waves representing the patterns of the national flag and the name of the country of emission Banknotes EditBolivar Edit In 1940 the Banco Central de Venezuela began issuing paper money introducing denominations of Bs 10 Bs 20 Bs 50 Bs 100 and Bs 500 Bs 5 notes were issued between 1966 and 1974 when they were replaced by coins In 1989 notes for Bs 1 Bs 2 and Bs 5 were issued As inflation took hold higher denominations of banknotes started being introduced Bs 1 000 in 1991 Bs 2 000 and Bs 5 000 in 1994 and Bs 10 000 Bs 20 000 and Bs 50 000 in 1998 The first Bs 20 000 banknotes were made in a green color similar to the one of the Bs 2 000 banknotes which caused confusion and new banknotes were made in a new olive green color Starting from 2000 banknotes ranging from Bs 5 000 to Bs 50 000 were renamed to REPUBLICA BOLIVARIANA DE VENEZUELA instead of BANCO CENTRAL DE VENEZUELA on the obverse after the 1999 constitution was adopted Moreover banknotes of Bs 10 000 Bs 20 000 and Bs 50 000 were updated in April 2006 after the National Assembly approved changes to the coat of arms which were made official on March 12 2006 The following is a list of former Venezuelan bolivar banknotes Pre 1998 series banknotes from various series Image Denomination Emission Year Obverse Reverse 5 bolivares 1968 Simon Bolivar and Francisco de Miranda National Pantheon of Venezuela 10 bolivares 1968 Simon Bolivar and Antonio Jose de Sucre Altar de la Patria Campo de Carabobo 20 bolivares 1971 Jose Antonio Paez Altar de la Patria Campo de Carabobo50 bolivares 1971 Andres Bello Palace of the Academies100 bolivares 1971 Simon Bolivar Federal Legislative Palace500 bolivares 1981 Simon Bolivar A branch of orchids 1 000 bolivares 1991 Simon Bolivar Signing of the Venezuelan Declaration of Independence 2 000 bolivares 1994 Antonio Jose de Sucre The Battle of Junin5 000 bolivares 1994 Simon Bolivar and his coat of arms A reproduction of the painting El 19 de Abril de 1810 by Juan Lovera1998 Series 1 2 1 000 bolivares 1998 Simon Bolivar A picture of National Pantheon in Caracas 3 4 2 000 bolivares 1998 Andres Bello A picture of frailejones and a view of the Pico Bolivar 5 6 10 000 bolivares 1998 Simon Bolivar Teresa Carreno Cultural Complex Caracas 7 8 20 000 bolivares 1998 Simon Rodriguez and the Angel Falls in the background A blue and yellow macaw and the Angel Falls 9 10 50 000 bolivares 1998 Jose Maria Vargas Central University of Venezuela Caracas2000 Series REPUBLICA BOLIVARIANA DE VENEZUELA 11 12 5 000 bolivares 2000 Francisco de Miranda Picture of two angelfishes and a panorama of the Guri Dam 13 14 10 000 bolivares 2000 Antonio Jose de Sucre A Marpesia petreus butterfly and the Supreme Tribunal of Justice 15 16 20 000 bolivares 2001 Simon Rodriguez and the Angel Falls in the background A blue and yellow macaw and the Angel Falls 17 18 50 000 bolivares 2005 Jose Maria Vargas Central University of Venezuela CaracasHard bolivar Edit 2008 2016 2007 Edit New banknotes of the series 2007 2015 with values of Bs F 2 to Bs F 100 were issued from 20 March 2007 until 5 November 2015 and became legal tender from 1 January 2008 to 20 August 2018 The greater the values the longer re issuing occurred Only the Bs F 50 and Bs F 100 notes were re issued in November 2015 Bs F 2 March 20 2007 to October 29 2013 Bs F 5 March 20 2007 to August 19 2014 Bs F 10 March 20 2007 to August 19 2014 Bs F 20 March 20 2007 to August 19 2014 Bs F 50 March 20 2007 to November 5 2015 70 Bs F 100 March 20 2007 to November 5 2015 70 The obverse side is portrait oriented with the lower half carrying a portrait while the reverse side is landscape oriented the left two thirds showing an animal in front of its habitat Re issues retain the value specific motifs but the printing quality is different The notes are printed by Casa de la Moneda Venezuela in Venezuela 70 2008 SeriesDenomination Value in Bs 1879 2007 Emission Year Size millimeters Obverse Reverse ImageBs F 2 2 000 2007 156 69 Francisco de Miranda Orinoco River Dolphins Inia geoffrensis with Coro Dunes in background Gusano flowerBs F 5 5 000 2007 Pedro Camejo Giant armadillo Priodontes maximus with the Llanos plains in the backgroundBs F 10 10 000 2007 Cacique Guaicaipuro American harpy eagle Harpia harpyja with the Ucaima Falls at Canaima National Park in the backgroundBs F 20 20 000 2007 Luisa Caceres de Arismendi Hawksbill turtle Eretmochelys imbricata with Macanao Mountain in the backgroundBs F 50 50 000 2007 Simon Rodriguez Spectacled bear Tremarctos ornatos with Laguna Santo Cristo at Sierra Nevada National Park in the backgroundBs F 100 100 000 2007 Simon Bolivar Red siskin Carduelis cucullata with Cerro El Avila at El Avila National Park in the background2016 17 Edit source source source source source source source source Venezuelans lining up at the Banco de Venezuela branch in Chacao to deposit the Bs F 100 note after President Maduro withdrew it from circulation High inflation which was a part of Venezuela s economic collapse caused the hard bolivar s value to plummet The Bs F 2 and Bs F 5 notes were no longer found in circulation due to the hyperinflation but remained legal tender By December 2016 the Bs F 100 note the largest denomination was only worth about US 0 23 on the black market 71 On 7 December 2016 a new series of banknotes recolors of the previous notes in denominations of Bs F 500 Bs F 1 000 Bs F 2 000 Bs F 5 000 Bs F 10 000 and Bs F 20 000 were unveiled to the Venezuelan public 69 71 Days later on 11 December President Nicolas Maduro who had been ruling by decree wrote into law that the Bs F 100 would be pulled from circulation within 72 hours because mafias were allegedly storing those particular notes to drive inflation 72 With more than 6 billion Bs F 100 notes issued consisting of 46 of Venezuela s issued currency Maduro enacted an exchange for Venezuelan citizens to transfer all Bs F 100 notes for Bs F 100 coins while also blocking international travel to prevent the return of the bolivares that were supposedly stockpiled 72 73 The government justified the move claiming that the United States was working with crime syndicates to spirit away Venezuela s paper money to warehouses in Europe to cause the fall of the government The government was thwarting this threat by withdrawing the notes from circulation 74 On 14 February 2017 Paraguayan authorities uncovered a 30 tonne stash of Bs F 50 and Bs F 100 notes totaling Bs F 1 5 billion on its Brazilian border that had not yet been circulated 75 According to a United States Department of Defense adviser linked to The Pentagon the Bs F 1 5 billion was printed by Venezuela and destined for Bolivia since unlike the implied exchange rate of thousands of hard bolivares equaling one United States dollar the exchange rate was approximately 10 hard bolivares per dollar making the value of the stash 419 times stronger from US 358 000 to US 150 million 75 The Pentagon adviser further stated that the Venezuelan government tried to send the newly printed notes to be exchanged by the Bolivian government so Bolivia could pay 20 of its debt to Venezuela and so Venezuela could use the US dollars for its own disposal 75 On 3 November 2017 the Banco Central de Venezuela issued a Bs F 100 000 note which is similar to the Bs F 100 note of the 2007 series and the Bs F 20 000 of the 2016 series but with the denomination spelled out in full instead of adding an additional three zeros to the number 100 This denomination was worth US 2 42 using the unofficial exchange rate at the date of its release New banknotes of the 2016 17 series with values of Bs F 500 to Bs F 100 000 were issued from 7 December 2016 until 20 August 2018 the day when the sovereign bolivar was introduced Notes from Bs F 5 000 to Bs F 100 000 were recently re issued in December 2017 Bs F 500 August 18 2016 to March 23 2017 Bs F 1 000 August 18 2016 to March 23 2017 Bs F 2 000 August 18 2016 Bs F 5 000 August 18 2016 to December 13 2017 Bs F 10 000 August 18 2016 to December 13 2017 Bs F 20 000 August 18 2016 to December 13 2017 Bs F 100 000 September 7 2017 to December 13 2017 Maduro has announced that after the currency redenomination has carried out on 20 August 2018 these old denominations with a face value of 1 000 hard bolivares or higher will circulate in parallel with the new series of sovereign bolivar notes and will continue to be used for a limited time 76 Banknotes with a face value below BsF 1 000 were withdrawn from circulation and ceased to be legal tender on 20 August 2018 They have to be deposited in local banks 77 78 2016 17 SeriesDenomination Value in Bs S20 Aug 4 Dec 2018 Emission Year Obverse ReverseBs F 500 Bs S 0 005 2016 Francisco de Miranda Orinoco River Dolphins Inia geoffrensis with Coro Dunes in background Gusano flowerBs F 1 000 Bs S 0 01 2016 Pedro Camejo Giant armadillo Priodontes maximus with the Llanos plains in the backgroundBs F 2 000 Bs S 0 02 2016 Cacique Guaicaipuro American harpy eagle Harpia harpyja with the Ucaima Falls at Canaima National Park in the backgroundBs F 5 000 Bs S 0 05 2016 Luisa Caceres de Arismendi Hawksbill turtle Eretmochelys imbricata with Macanao Mountain in the backgroundBs F 10 000 Bs S 0 10 2016 Simon Rodriguez Spectacled bear Tremarctos ornatos with Laguna Santo Cristo at Sierra Nevada National Park in the backgroundBs F 20 000 Bs S 0 20 2016 Simon Bolivar Red siskin Carduelis cucullata with Cerro El Avila at El Avila National Park in the backgroundBs F 100 000 Bs S 1 2017 Simon Bolivar Red siskin Carduelis cucullata with Cerro El Avila at El Avila National Park in the background2018 Edit By May 2018 the hard bolivar s banknotes represented very little value and they had become in short supply 79 Weighing scales could no longer convert mass to price and receipts could no longer fit the numbers on their paper 80 In June 2018 seven months after its release the value of the Bs F 100 000 note largest denomination had its value reduced by 98 from US 2 42 in November 2017 to US 0 05 as a result of increasing hyperinflation The lower denomination hard bolivar banknotes up to Bs F 500 were demonetized on 20 August 2018 with the introduction of the sovereign bolivar Higher denominations Bs F 1 000 and above remained legal tender during a transition period On 30 November 2018 it was announced that the remaining denominations of the old currency will be withdrawn from circulation and cease to be legal tender on 5 December 2018 81 Sovereign bolivar Edit 2018 Edit On 22 March 2018 with a declared state of emergency a redenomination of the currency was announced 82 The conversion from hard bolivar to sovereign bolivar banknotes officially occurred on 20 August 2018 with new denominations of Bs S 2 Bs S 5 Bs S 10 Bs S 20 Bs S 50 Bs S 100 Bs S 200 and Bs S 500 83 Four months after entry into circulation shops and state banks began refusing the Bs S 2 as its value had significantly declined since the redenomination 84 85 By November 2019 except for the Bs S 500 all notes issued in 2018 were worthless 2018 SeriesDenomination Value in Bs F Emission Year Obverse Reverse2 bolivares 200 000 2018 Josefa Camejo Yellow crowned amazon parrot Amazona ochrocephala with the Morrocoy National Park in the background5 bolivares 500 000 2018 Jose Felix Ribas portrait by Martin Tovar y Tovar Atelopus cruciger with the Henri Pittier National Park in the background10 bolivares 1 000 000 2018 Rafael Urdaneta Giant anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla with the Catatumbo lightning in the background20 bolivares 2 000 000 2018 Simon Rodriguez Jaguar Panthera onca with the Waraira Repano National Park in the background50 bolivares 5 000 000 2018 Antonio Jose de Sucre Cunaguaro Leopardus tigrinus with the Peninsula de Paria National Park in the background100 bolivares 10 000 000 2018 Ezequiel Zamora Brown spider monkey Ateles hybridus with the Guatopo National Park in the background200 bolivares 20 000 000 2018 Francisco de Miranda Military macaw Ara militaris with the Waraira Repano National Park in the background500 bolivares 50 000 000 2018 Simon Bolivar Venezuelan troupial Icterus icterus with the Macarao National Park in the background2019 Edit Further inflation since the soberano redenomination resulted in the creation of Bs S 10 000 Bs S 20 000 and Bs S 50 000 banknotes in June 2019 86 Not mentioning inflation the Central Bank of Venezuela said the introduction of the new banknotes would complement and optimize the monetary system and that their purpose was to make payment systems more efficient 87 On 23 April 2020 the exchange rate per xe com was US 1 144 697 34 VES the following day the rate slid to US 1 Bs S 171 140 42 Banknotes with a narrow segmented security thread were printed by Goznak those with a wider one were printed elsewhere 2019 SeriesImage Denomination Value in Bs D Emission Year Obverse Reverse 88 10 000 bolivares 0 01 2019 Simon Bolivar Mausoleum of the Liberator Simon Bolivar 89 20 000 bolivares 0 02 2019 Simon Bolivar Mausoleum of the Liberator Simon Bolivar 90 50 000 bolivares 0 05 2019 Simon Bolivar Mausoleum of the Liberator Simon Bolivar2020 Edit As of December 2020 the highest denomination banknote Bs S 50 000 was worth less than US 0 05 91 and the minimum wage is Bs S 1 200 000 about US 1 per month 92 By September 2020 all sovereign bolivar banknotes Bs S 2 to Bs S 500 issued on 20 August 2018 were deemed worthless Venezuelan officials are planning a new Bs S 100 000 note 93 Meanwhile as of 16 December 2020 the exchange rate was over 1 million bolivares to one US dollar 94 2021 Edit On 5 March 2021 the Central Bank of Venezuela introduced 3 new denominations Bs S 200 000 Bs S 500 000 and Bs S 1 000 000 which were made available to the general public on 8 March 2021 95 The Bs S 1 000 000 note was only worth US 0 52 at the time of the announcement 96 By late May 2021 the exchange rate had risen to over 3 million sovereign bolivares to one US dollar 94 According to a July 2021 Bloomberg article Venezuela plans to redenominate the bolivar at a ratio of 1 000 000 1 in August 2021 effectively removing six zeros from the denominations The current largest denomination banknote is 1 000 000 bolivares expressed on the note with a predominant 1 followed by the descriptive millon de bolivares It is therefore likely that the bank intends to retain the bolivar currency name while reusing the existing note designs 97 2021 SeriesImage Denomination Value in Bs D Emission Year Obverse Reverse 98 200 000 bolivares 0 20 2020 Simon Bolivar Mausoleum of the Liberator Simon Bolivar 99 500 000 bolivares 0 50 2020 Simon Bolivar Mausoleum of the Liberator Simon Bolivar 100 1 000 000 bolivares 1 00 2020 Simon Bolivar Entrance to the Monument to the Motherland on Carabobo Fields Battle of CaraboboDigital bolivar Edit Banknotes of 5 10 20 50 and 100 digital bolivares were introduced in 2021 101 all bearing similar motifs but different colors Digital bolivar banknotesImage Denomination Emission Year Color Obverse Reverse5 bolivares 2021 brown Simon Bolivar Entrance to the Monument to the Motherland on Carabobo Fields Battle of Carabobo10 bolivares blue violet20 bolivares orange50 bolivares green100 bolivares red violetCurrent VED exchange ratesFrom Google Finance AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD INR EUR JPYFrom Yahoo Finance AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD INR EUR JPYFrom XE com AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD INR EUR JPYFrom OANDA AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD INR EUR JPYNotes Edit Despite the name banknotes and coins for the currencies were issued and the Financial Times described it as no more digital than any other currency 8 See also EditEconomy of Venezuela Hyperinflation in Venezuela SUCRE currency References Edit a b c d e f g Banco Central de Venezuela bcv org ve in Spanish Venezuela Inflation rate 2022 Statista Retrieved 2021 10 05 La inflacion acumulada en 2020 en Venezuela fue de 2 959 8 segun el BCV EFE in Spanish Retrieved 2021 10 05 Jose Guerra Seguimos en Hiperinflacion La inflacion al cierre del 2020 en Venezuela fue de 3713 Observatorio Venezolano de Finanzas in Spanish 6 January 2021 Retrieved 2021 10 05 a b c d Indicadores Economia Venezolana dolartoday com in Spanish Inflation rate average consumer prices Venezuela International Monetary Fund Retrieved 2021 10 05 Venezuela Introduces New Currency Gata 2008 01 01 Retrieved 2008 02 04 a b c Silva Vanessa Long Gideon 2021 10 01 Venezuela lops another six zeros off its currency Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Retrieved 2021 10 05 Cohen Benjamin J Venezuela s desperate currency devaluation won t save its economy from collapse The Conversation Retrieved 2021 10 05 List one Currency fund and precious metal codes PDF SIX Financial Information AG 1 October 2021 a b Venezuela introduces new currency with 6 fewer zeros Associated Press 2021 10 01 Retrieved 2021 10 05 Billetes del cono monetario actual coexistiran con los billetes y monedas de la Nueva Expresion Monetaria Banco Central de Venezuela 2021 09 03 Retrieved 2021 10 05 Au Venezuela mine par l hyperinflation la monnaie nationale perd six zeros d un coup Le Monde fr in French 2021 10 01 Retrieved 2021 10 05 The weakening of the strong bolivar The Economist 2010 01 14 Retrieved 2016 12 10 Sistema Cambiario Archived from the original on 2011 04 09 Retrieved 2011 04 09 Home planetbanknote com Asamblea Nacional Republica Bolivariana de Venezuela in Spanish Archived from the original on 15 August 2018 Retrieved 22 August 2018 Calculadora Dolar Today Dolar Today May 8 2018 Currency of Venezuela Venezuela s new currency the Venezuelan Bolivar fuerte Republica de venezuela com Retrieved 2016 12 10 Numismatic Catalog of Venezuela Coins in Pesos Fuerte Retrieved 2008 02 04 television advertisements Bolivar Fuerte Bs F for the new currency repeatedly use fuerte as meaning strong such as in Una economia fuerte a strong economy and Aqui hay fuerza There s strength in this Rueda Jorge 2008 01 01 Venezuela cuts three zeros off bolivar currency Reuters Retrieved 2008 02 04 Mander Benedict 10 February 2013 Venezuelan devaluation sparks panic Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Retrieved 11 February 2013 Venezuela will slash value of currency the bolivar BBC 2010 01 09 Retrieved 2010 01 09 Chavez Devaluation Puts Venezuelans to Queue on Price Raise Bloomberg 11 February 2013 Archived from the original on February 17 2013 Retrieved 11 February 2013 Holodny Elena 18 February 2016 Venezuela raises gas prices 6 200 Business Insider Retrieved 18 February 2016 a b Hanke Steve 18 August 2018 Venezuela s Great Bolivar Scam Nothing but a Face Lift Forbes Retrieved 19 August 2018 Venezuela eliminates heavily subsidized DIPRO forex rate Reuters 30 Jan 2018 Retrieved 2018 01 30 Venezuela announces 99 6 percent devaluation of official forex rate Reuters 5 February 2018 Retrieved 20 August 2018 Banco Central de Venezuela bcv org ve Casa de Cambio ZOOM Retrieved 2018 06 23 Venezuela Inflation rate 2022 Statista Retrieved 2021 10 05 La inflacion acumulada en 2020 en Venezuela fue de 2 959 8 segun el BCV EFE in Spanish Retrieved 2021 10 05 Jose Guerra Seguimos en Hiperinflacion La inflacion al cierre del 2020 en Venezuela fue de 3713 Observatorio Venezolano de Finanzas in Spanish 6 January 2021 Retrieved 2021 10 05 Lopez Abel 2018 03 22 Maduro anuncia nueva reconversion monetaria El Nacional in Spanish Retrieved 2018 03 22 Venezuela to revalue ailing bolivar currency from June 4 Nasdaq 2018 03 22 Archived from the original on 2018 03 23 Retrieved 2018 03 22 Ya esta en Gaceta Oficial decreto de reconversion monetaria Panorama in Spanish Retrieved 2018 03 26 Web El Nacional 2018 04 29 Comenzaron a aparecer productos con precios el bolivares soberanos El Nacional in Spanish Retrieved 2018 04 30 WEB EL NACIONAL 2018 05 29 Maduro pospone entrada en vigencia de la reconversion monetaria El Nacional in Spanish Retrieved 2018 05 29 Inflation hit Venezuela to remove five zeros from currency Deutsche Welle 26 July 2018 Retrieved 2018 07 26 With 1 000 000 inflation Venezuela slashes five zeroes from its bills 26 July 2018 Retrieved 22 August 2018 Litzmayer Owen 5 Apr 2018 Venezuela Banknote News www banknotenews com Retrieved 2018 05 08 Hopps Kat 21 August 2018 Venezuela crisis How much is the bolivar worth today Bs to USD to GBP Retrieved 22 August 2018 Sterling Joe 2018 08 23 Venezuela issues new currency amid hyperinflation and social turmoil CNN Retrieved 2018 08 23 Venezuela rolls out new currency amid rampant hyperinflation Al Jazeera 20 August 2018 Retrieved 22 August 2018 Venezuela Bolivar soberano transition MRI Guide August 15 2018 Venezuela just devalued the bolivar by 95 and pegged it to a cryptocurrency Business Insider a b Venezuela hikes wages ahead of monetary overhaul Washington Post 2018 08 17 Archived from the original on 2019 06 07 Retrieved 2018 08 24 a b Lam Eric 20 August 2018 Here s What Maduro Has Said of Venezuela s Petro Cryptocurrency Bloomberg News a b Phillips Tom 20 August 2018 Venezuela devalues currency and raises minimum wage by 3 000 the Guardian Retrieved 22 August 2018 Venezuela paralysed by launch of sovereign bolivar currency BBC News 21 August 2018 Venezuela rolls out new currency amid rampant hyperinflation www aljazeera com a b Ellsworth Brian 30 August 2018 Special Report In Venezuela new cryptocurrency is nowhere to be found Reuters Retrieved 7 September 2018 a b c Mak Aaron 22 August 2018 Venezuela Is About to Become the First Country to Peg Its Currency to a Cryptocurrency Don t Believe the Hype Slate Magazine Retrieved 23 August 2018 Moskvitch Katia 22 August 2018 Inside the bluster and lies of Petro Venezuela s cryptocurrency scam Wired Retrieved 11 October 2018 Venezuela New currency fails to curb hyperinflation Al Jazeera Retrieved 2018 08 24 A million to 1 Venezuela s currency losing 6 zeros AP NEWS 2021 08 05 Retrieved 2021 08 30 Venezuela le quitara 6 ceros a su moneda y el bolivar soberano se llamara bolivar digital BBC News Mundo in Spanish Retrieved 2021 08 30 Venezuela New banknotes denominated in bolivares digitales in October Stuck in Venezuela with those currency exchange blues Los Angeles Times 12 November 2013 Retrieved 7 January 2014 Venezuela bolivar hits record low 100 U S dollar on black market Reuters 26 September 2014 Retrieved 5 October 2014 Venezuela s bolivar tumbles beyond 200 mark Financial Times 25 February 2015 Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Retrieved 28 April 2015 El precio REAL del Dolar paralelo en Venezuela DolarToday com 15 February 2013 Archived from the original on 15 February 2013 Retrieved 8 February 2021 Pardo Daniel 8 July 2015 Living with Venezuela s high inflation BBC News UK Retrieved 7 August 2015 Simon Romero February 9 2008 In Venezuela Faith in Chavez Starts to Wane New York Times Otis John 12 December 2013 Venezuela forces ISPs to police Internet Committee to Protect Journalists Retrieved May 15 2015 Custom Dolar Today Coins from Venezuela 1000 Bolivares Design B Type A Numismatic Catalog of Venezuela www numismatica info ve 2016 12 04 Retrieved 2016 12 10 a b Ampliacion del cono monetario PDF Press release in Spanish Banco Central de Venezuela 20 December 2016 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 12 20 Retrieved 22 August 2018 a b c banknotes gt Venezuela gt series 2007 2015 colnect com retrieved 12 December 2016 Specific re issuing date above pair of signatures above portrait a b Venezuela s new banknotes Deutsche Welle 8 December 2016 Retrieved 9 December 2016 a b Venezuela s Maduro orders 100 unit banknotes out of circulation AFP 11 December 2016 Retrieved 12 December 2016 Venezuela pulls most common banknote from circulation to beat mafia The Guardian 11 December 2016 Retrieved 12 December 2016 Declaring war on common sense Venezuela bans its own money Washington Post Dec 15 2016 a b c Coutinho Leonardo 23 February 2017 Veja Venezuela y Bolivia son sospechosas de esquema estatal de lavado Eju TV in European Spanish Retrieved 24 February 2017 Maduro El nuevo cono monetario va a coexistir con el viejo hasta su extension www noticierodigital com Retrieved 2018 08 14 Banco Central de Venezuela on Twitter Twitter Retrieved 2018 08 14 WEB EL NACIONAL 2018 08 14 Billetes inferiores a 1 000 bolivares no tendran valor a partir del 20A El Nacional in Spanish Retrieved 2018 08 14 Venezuelans Are Paying a 100 Premium for Cash Bloomberg 2018 03 02 Retrieved 2018 04 05 Venezuela s Hyperinflation Is Breaking Deli Scales Bloomberg 2018 03 14 Retrieved 2018 04 05 Bolivar Fuerte circulara hasta el miercoles 5 de diciembre En la Agenda 2001 com ve 2001 com ve Retrieved 2018 11 30 Resolucion N 18 03 01 RM Mediante la cual se dictan las Normas que Rigen en el Proceso de Reconversion Monetaria Banco Central de Venezuela in Spanish 2018 04 30 Retrieved 2020 08 31 Inicio el Programa de Recuperacion Economica con el Bolivar Soberano Banco Central de Venezuela in Spanish 2018 08 21 Retrieved 2020 08 31 Krystian 2019 01 06 Billetes de Bs S 2 no es aceptado ni en bancos del Estado Descifrado in European Spanish Retrieved 2019 01 08 C Manuel Tomillo 2019 01 06 Ya ni los bancos del Estado quieren aceptar los devaluados billetes de Bs S 2 Caraota Digital in European Spanish Retrieved 2019 01 08 permanent dead link Tres nuevos billetes se incorporan al Cono Monetario vigente Banco Central de Venezuela Retrieved 2019 06 12 Venezuela adds bigger bank notes due to hyperinflation Reuters 2019 06 12 Retrieved 2019 06 13 P NEW Banknote ws 2019 01 22 Retrieved 2020 06 04 P NEW Banknote ws 2019 01 22 Retrieved 2020 06 04 P NEW Banknote ws 2019 01 22 Retrieved 2020 06 04 Convert Venezuelan Bolivar to United States Dollar VES to USD Currency Converter Retrieved 2020 11 30 Lo que se sabe del aumento del salario minimo y que implica para los venezolanos 12 November 2020 Retrieved 2020 11 30 Laya Patricia Zerpa Fabiola 5 October 2020 Venezuela Planning New 100 000 Bolivar Bills Worth Just 0 23 Bloomberg Retrieved 22 November 2020 a b 1 USD to VES US Dollar to Venezuelan Bolivar Exchange Rates BCV amplia Cono Monetario vigente con incorporacion de tres nuevos billetes Banco Central de Venezuela Retrieved 6 March 2021 Venezuela to introduce 1 million bolivar bill dw com Retrieved 6 March 2021 Laya Patricia 2021 07 01 Venezuela to Cut Six Zeroes Off Bolivar to Simplify Transactions Bloomberg com Retrieved 2021 08 30 P NEW Banknote ws 2020 09 03 Retrieved 2020 06 04 P NEW Banknote ws 2019 01 22 Retrieved 2020 06 04 P NEW Banknote ws 2019 01 22 Retrieved 2020 06 04 What Is the Venezuelan Bolivar Digital Digitales Banknote World 2022 05 11 Retrieved 2023 04 22 Bibliography EditKrause Chester L Clifford Mishler 1991 Standard Catalog of World Coins 1801 1991 18th ed Krause Publications ISBN 0873411501 Pick Albert 1994 Standard Catalog of World Paper Money General Issues Colin R Bruce II and Neil Shafer editors 7th ed Krause Publications ISBN 0 87341 207 9 External links EditCurrent Legal Banknotes Venezuela Banknotes of Venezuela Gallery Numismatic Catalog of Venezuela History of Venezuelan Currency in Spanish Currency Reconversion Calculator Bolivar Soberano to Bolivar Digital Portals Money Numismatics South America Venezuela Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Venezuelan bolivar amp oldid 1152029534, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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