Horror coming to USA--hyper-inflation--as in Venezuala: 36 747 cargo plane-loads of paper currency

Apollonian

Guest Columnist
Hyperinflating Venezuela Used 36 Boeing 747 Cargo Planes To Deliver Its Worthless Bank Notes

Link: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-...-747-cargo-planes-deliver-its-worthless-bank-

Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/04/2016 22:17 -0500

The weeks ago, when we showed "What The Death Of A Nation Looks Like: Venezuela Prepares For 720% Hyperinflation", we said that after looking at a chart of Venezuela's upcoming hyperinflation...

... a hyperinflation in which the soaring stock market has failed to keep pace with the collapsing currency, thereby mocking all erroneous thought experiments that under hyperinflation being long the stock market is a sure hedge to currency destruction...

... we joked that it is unclear just where the country will find all the paper banknotes it needs for all its new currency.

After all, central-bank data shows Venezuela more than doubled the supply of 100-, 50- and 2-bolivar notes in 2015 as it doubled monetary liquidity including bank deposits. Supply has grown even as Venezuela has fewer U.S. dollars to support new bolivars, a result of falling oil prices.

This question, as morbidly amusing as it may have been to us if not the local population, became particularly poginant yesterday, when for the first time, one US Dollar could purchase more than 1000 Venezuela Bolivars on the black market.

And, as if on cue, the WSJ answered. As it turns out we were not the only ones wondering how the devastated "socialist paradise" gets its exponentially collapsing paper currency, which in just the past month has lost 17% of its value.

The answer: 36 Boeing 747s.

From the WSJ:

Millions of pounds of provisions, stuffed into three-dozen 747 cargo planes, arrived here from countries around the world in recent months to service Venezuela’s crippled economy.

But instead of food and medicine, the planes carried another resource that often runs scarce here: bills of Venezuela’s currency, the bolivar.

The shipments were part of the import of at least five billion bank notes that President Nicolás Maduro’s administration authorized over the latter half of 2015 as the government boosts the supply of the country’s increasingly worthless currency, according to seven people familiar with the deals.

More planes are coming: in December, the central bank began secret negotiations to order 10 billion more bills, five of these people said, which would effectively double the amount of cash in circulation. That order alone is well above the eight billion notes the U.S. Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank each print annually—dollars and euros that unlike bolivars are used world-wide.

This means that Venezuela's hyperinflation, already tentatively estimated at 720%, will likely add on a few (hundred) zeroes by this time next year. It is also quite likely that Venezuela the country, as we know it now, will no longer exist because once any country is swept up in hyperinflationary rapids two things occur like clockwork: social uprisings and political coups.

But before it gets there, Venezuela's president Maduro will be busy liquidating the nation's roughly $12 billion in gold reserves, which his late predecessor fought hard in 2011 to repatriate back to Caracas. Sadly that gold was never meant to stay in Venezuela after all.

Meanwhile, life in Venezuela is disturbingly comparably to that under Weimar Germany, wheelbarrows of cash and all:

While use of credit cards and bank transfers is up, Venezuelans have to carry stacks of cash as many vendors try to avoid transaction fees. Dinner at a nice restaurant can cost a brick-size stack of bills. A cheese-stuffed corn cake—called an arepa—sells for nearly 1,000 bolivars, requiring 10 bills of the highest-denomination 100-bolivar bill, each worth less than 10 U.S. cents.

Rigid state price controls have only made matters worse, economists say, generating a thriving black market for just about every good, from car tires to baby diapers, in which cash is the preferred form of payment.

Adding insult to injury the very process of printing the almost instantly worthless currency costs Venezuela hundreds of millions of dollars.

"The bank-note buying spree is costing the cash-strapped leftist government hundreds of millions of dollars, said all seven of the people, who have been briefed on the deals Venezuela has entered with bank-note producers."

But it gets even more ridiculous for the government where the largest bill in denomination is 100 Bolivars:

The high cost of the printing binge is an especially heavy burden as Venezuela reels from the oil-price collapse and 17 years of free-spending socialist rule that have left state finances in shambles.

Most countries around the world have outsourced bank-note printing to private companies that can provide sophisticated anticounterfeiting technologies like watermarks and security strips. What drives Venezuela’s orders is the sheer volume and urgency of its currency needs.

The central bank’s own printing presses in the industrial city of Maracay don’t have enough security paper and metal to print more than a small portion of the country’s bills, the people familiar with the matter said. Their difficulties stem from the same dollar shortages that have plagued Venezuela’s centralized economy, as the Maduro administration struggles to pay for imports of everything, including cancer medication, toilet paper and insect repellent to battle the mosquito-borne Zika virus.

That means Venezuela has to buy bolivars from abroad at any cost. “It’s easy money for a lot of these companies,” one of the people with details on the negotiations said.

Venezuela's misery means a hefty pay day for those who end up printing its worthless currency, among them, the same company which printed Weimar's own currency:

The huge order for 10 billion notes can’t be satisfied by a single firm, the people familiar with the deals said. So it has generated interest from some of the world’s largest commercial printers, each vying for a piece of the pie at a time when low profits in bank-note printing have pushed many of them to cut back on capacity.

According to the people familiar with the deals, the companies include the U.K.’s De La Rue, the Canadian Bank Note Co., France’s Oberthur Fiduciaire and a subsidiary of Munich-based Giesecke & Devrient, which printed currency in 1920s Weimar Germany, when citizens hauled wheelbarrows of cash to buy bread. More recently, the German technology company was the source of security paper for Zimbabwe when it was stricken in 2008 with a hyperinflation episode in which prices doubled daily.

Wait a minute, why not just print a single 100,000,000 Bolivar note instead of one million 100 bolivar bills? After all the savings on the printing, let along the air freight, to the already insolvent country will be tremendous and allow it to pretend it is not a failed nation for at least a few more days? It is here that the sheer brilliance of the rulers of this socialist paradise shines through:

Currency experts say the logistical challenges of importing and storing massive quantities of bank notes underscore an undeniable truth: Venezuela is spending a lot more than it needs because the government hasn’t printed a higher-denomination bank note—revealing a misplaced fear, analysts say, that doing so would implicitly acknowledge high inflation the government publicly denies.

“Big bills do not cause inflation. Big bills are the result of inflation,” said Owen W. Linzmayer, a San Francisco-based bank-note expert and author who catalogs world currencies. “Larger bills can actually save money for the central bank because instead of having to replace 10 deteriorated notes, you only need five or one,” he said.

The Venezuelan central bank’s latest orders have been exclusively only for 100- and 50-bolivar notes, according to the seven people familiar with the deals, because 20s, 10s, 5s and 2s are worth less than the production cost.

Mr. Maduro and his allies say galloping consumer prices reflect a capitalist conspiracy to destabilize the government.

Well, no, but at this point one may as well sit back and be amused by the idiocy of it all. But at least we will give Maduro one thing: he has done away with the pretense that when push comes to shove, the state and the central bank (and thus commercial banks) are two different things: "the president in late December changed a law to give himself full control over the central bank, stripping congressional oversight just as his political opponents took control of the National Assembly for the first time in 17 years."

Finally, while the rest of the world is wrapped up in such deflationary monetary madness as negative interest rates, Venezuela is subject to monetary lunacy too, only of a far more familiar, hyperinflationary kinds:

A color photocopy of a 100-bolivar bill costs more than the note. In an image that went viral on social media, a diner is shown using a 2-bolivar note to hold a greasy fried turnover because it is cheaper than a napkin.

And before we close this latest chapter on our ongoing chronicle of Venezuela's complete economic disintegration, we are delighted to find that Kyle Bass's "nickel" idea has made its way even in this Latin American socialist paradise:

On a recent day, a 46-year-old slum-dweller named Mario walked the streets of a wealthy district of Caracas with a megaphone, calling on residents to sell him their coins, which he gathered into a rolling water cooler. The idea: to melt it down later.

“You can make an amazing ring,” said Mario, who wouldn’t give his last name but said he preferred to go by his nickname, Moneda, or “Coins.”

Now if only Venezuela had a way of exporting some of its hyperinflation to the rest of the world, drowning in "deflation" the result of a few hundred trillion in debt. Actually, fear not: ultimately hyperinflation is easy to achieve - Venezuela is a good example of this; what is difficult is to admit when the current system has failed and when importing 36 Jumbo Jets full of cash is the only solution.

With every passing day, the rest of the "Developed Word" gets one step closer to recreating Venezuela's experience.
 
16 Events That Have Put Venezuela On The Brink Of Collapse

Link: http://www.govtslaves.info/16-events-that-have-put-venezuela-on-the-brink-of-collapse/

venezuela collapse 2


(Nelson Albino) Following the publication of Sabrina Martin’s article in Panampost, “Looting on the Rise as Venezuela Runs Out of Food, Electricity,” several readers have been asking how Venezuela — a country that in the 60s and 70s was regarded as a future Australia — got so bad.

Hundreds of reasons help to answer this question, especially in the wake of some of the country’s stronger moments. Liberal policies between 1930 and 1966 allowed Venezuela to grow faster than any other country in the world — a kind of China of its time. This along with the nationalization of oil in 1976 and “Caracazo” in 1989.

But overall, the crisis has two main explanations: One is the nefarious dependence on oil, which has a castrating effect on the population and annuitant one on those trying to take power. The second is that all these elements are controlled by a political elite that has perpetuated widespread poverty, while simultaneously becoming extremely rich. They continue exploiting and plundering the country with this system, knowing that if they lose power, they will be judged both locally and internationally.

Here we have 16 reasons why Venezuela is dangerously close to an abyss from which they can not get out:

1) 1992: Hugo Chavez and a group of military soldiers stage a coup d’etat in February and another in November. It is the first time in over 30 years that political stability looks broken with a military coup, but it is in 1958 that civil authorities begin to rule in the country.

2) 1994: After spending only two years in prison, then-President Rafael Caldera pardons those coups, starting with Chavez himself.

3) 1998: Venezuelans, mostly of the middle class, decide to vote for Chavez, who has thrown himself into the presidential race. They want “order” and a “strong hand” to fight the underworld of crime, and are disenchanted by an economic crisis caused by a spike in oil prices.

4) 2001: Chavez begins to show a dangerous socialist drift. Thousands of Venezuelans take to the streets against him. The president radicalizes himself and declares that his government is “a peaceful but armed revolution.”

5) 2002: A mass protest leaves 17 dead and causes Chavez to be ousted from power in a still-confusing coup. He tries to be manipulated by businessman Pedro Carmona to establish a plutocracy. Chavez returns to power less than 72 hours later, and begins to control all institutions.

6) 2003: After a two-month strike that sought to evict him from the country, the president decrees exchange controls, which become more draconian and continue through today. For 13 years, Venezuelans have not had a legal currency exchange market, and the price of the currency has gone from 900 Bs. to Bs. 1,200,000 per dollar, without increases in the international reserves.

7) 2004: A referendum to oust him from power is ratified Chávez in office, although its results are still uncertain. In fact, the irregularities are so great that international observers note that nobody would “ever know what really happened.” After this, they are never invited to observe elections. In the same year, Chavez proposes the “Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas” (ALBA) as an alternative to the FTAA, the hemispheric free trade zone proposed by the United States. It reaches throughout the Caribbean and Central America, and discounts oil, with a two-year grace period and a 20-year repayment period.
8) 2005: With a divided and demoralized opposition from the previous year’s referendum, the pressure from opposition voters makes parties from the opposition call for abstention during parliamentary elections. A parliament totally controlled by Chavez and elected with less than 10 percent of the population allows him to occupy all powers, including judicial and electoral.

9) 2006: With the country under tight control, Chavez wins the election again, with oil at US $100, where it would remain for almost seven years. He wins 62 percent of the vote, despite insisting throughout his campaign that those “who voted for Chavez did so for Socialism.”

10) 2007: Immediately after his reelection, Chavez begins an aggressive policy of confiscation and expropriation of private companies, seeking to control the media and the food industry, introduce constitutional reform that would make Venezuela practically communist. Alarmed, Venezuelans vote No, and the president recognizes his defeat, but notes that he is going to continue his interventionist policies. Also in that year, shortages of essential commodities like milk begin to become a problem, as the food industry is one of the hardest-hit by the destructive fever of Chavez.

11) 2008-09: Chavez, driven by oil prices that hit US $140, destroys national productive apparatuses through change controls, preventing him from buying supplies and essential raw materials, and also flooding the country with cheap agricultural imports. In many cases, overpricing and corruption results. The first serious drop in oil prices is also seen and his model starts to suffer a crisis, but Chavez, looking (and subsequently obtaining) an amendment that allows him to be reelected indefinitely, replaces those revenues with indebtedness — primarily with communist China — who is taking over large areas of the Venezuelan economy.

This is the real beginning of the downfall of the Venezuelan state, which between 2007 and 2016 has always handled over 10 percent of GDP fiscal deficits, according to economist Luis Oliveros. The central government, which in 1998 had 800 thousand employees, now exceeds 3 million (10 percent of the population) and ministries — which in 1998 were 12 — are 36 in 2016

Also in 2009, the first Venezuelan electricity crisis occurs. Chavez announces an emergency plan with the importation of powerplants from Cuba. It is estimated that the emergency electrical plan costs US $40 billion, which could have been used to install all the Venezuelan electrical system again, with a result that creates abundant corruption and was never investigated, but which founded banks in Andorra and Switzerland.

12) 2011: Chavez announces to the people that he has cancer, nevertheless declaring himself a candidate for next year’s presidential elections, with a spending plan so aggressive that economists Ricardo Hausmann and Miguel Angel Santos have estimated it made oil prices reach the equivalent of US $197. At that time, oil is at US $60, and the difference was covered with debt. Minister Jorge Giordani says corruption stole $25 billion.

13) 2012: Chavez wins the presidential election, and only appears in public twice: two days after the election to receive his accreditation, and on December 8 to say he has to undergo surgery again. He adds that if he can’t exercise his mandate, that his heir Nicolas Maduro should take over. Chavez dies on April 5, 2013 and Maduro wins the contest a month later, though controversial. Maduro inherits a country in the process of falling oil prices. With no idea of what to do beyond orders to strengthen the “Socialism of the 21st century” philosophy he received from his political father, Maduro destroys any productive policies left in his government.

14) 2013: Paralyzed, Maduro is taking no steps beyond issuing money to raise the country’s fiscal deficit (many estimate at more than 20 points of GDP) and praying that oil prices rise. Tightening control changes to pay the foreign debt, which had its highest peaks of payments in 2015 and this year. It is estimated that in these three years, the money supply increases tenfold, and consequently creates inflation.

Las continuas devaluaciones han convertido al bolívar en una moneda sin ningún valor. (Ecopolitica)

Continuous devaluations had made the bolivar a worthless currency. (Ecopolitica)

15) 2014-15: The grasp that Maduro has on imports to pay debts leads to a shortage of medicines by 95 percent, and food above 80 percent. The minimum wage of Venezuelans reaches less than one seventh part of goods and services, and lines are increasingly forming in front of the few supermarkets that remain open. The ruling party loses the parliamentary election by a landslide, and since then, thanks to the control that the ruling party still has on the remaining powers, Maduro tries to stop what is already vox populi in Venezuela: his ousting as a result of his inability to solve the crisis.

16) 2016: In parallel, the return of the cyclical weather phenomenon of “El Niño” has led to — thanks to incompetence by authorities and theft — widespread power outages across the country. The sum of the growing hunger (it is estimated that 76 percent of Venezuelans have fallen into poverty and 13 percent eat only twice a day), supply shortages and electricity failures have made Maduro a ruler that is rejected by 85 percent of the population.

Looting last week was contained but the Governor of Lara Henri Falcón. The former “Chavista” noted that “this is a thousand times worse than the reasons that led to the ‘Caracazo’” and that in any moment, political, social and economic crisis may lead to a conflict with incalculable consequences.
 
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