Venezuelans Express Regret as Brief Dollarization Boost Comes to an End

Venezuelans Express Regret as Brief Dollarization Boost Comes to an End



CARACAS, Sept 1 (Reuters) – When ‍Venezuela’s⁢ economy was showing tentative signs of recovery in 2020, Enrique Perrella thought it was time to open a ⁤cafe in ⁤eastern Caracas serving coffee, desserts and breakfasts.But by January of this year, faced with rising ​rent, increased taxes and financing constraints, he closed it down.”The boom is over,” said Perrella. “There is no protection for investment.”After​ a brief⁤ recovery⁢ on the ⁤back of de-facto‌ dollarization, Venezuela’s economy is once again falling victim to high inflation, lagging salaries, and decreases in purchases and production of goods, say business ⁣owners ⁢and analysts.The government of Nicolas Maduro relaxed currency controls in 2019, allowing more transactions in​ dollars despite U.S. sanctions. The⁤ move led to a slight recovery in 2021 and 2022 after eight years of economic collapse‌ and the migration of some 7.3‍ million Venezuelans.Maduro ⁣hailed economic growth of 15% last year and said in ⁤August that ​expansion was⁣ continuing.But merchants and analysts said the dollarization boost has ⁢proven⁣ insufficient in the face of limited credit, a depreciating local currency, higher taxes, straitened public spending amid lower oil income, and rising utility‍ bills.Economic ⁣activity decreased 7%​ in the first half‍ of 2023 compared to the same period the ⁣year before, according to ​the non-governmental Venezuelan Finance Observatory, while inflation ‌reached 398% year-on-year in July, according to the central ​bank.Last month, Yaner Fung shuttered the small supermarket he had owned in western Barquisimeto for 15 years.”I had to close because in the last ⁢two months sales were falling due to less purchasing power …⁢ and more than anything because of increases in taxes and utilities,” ⁢he said.Fung now works for a similar business.”I went from owner to employee.”‘NO BUYING CAPACITY’Other businesses which have survived said they were slashing prices, salaries and profit margins to stay afloat.”To keep up operations we‍ had to cut salaries and ⁤work fewer days a week,” said the owner of a small food factory in the industrial central city of Valencia ⁤who asked not to be identified. “There is no buying capacity.”Industrial production⁤ was down⁢ 7.6% in the first half ‌of⁤ the year, compared with the same period in 2022, according to manufacturing guild Conindustria. Commercial sales were down 9% in the same period, local analyst firm Ecoanalitica said.The central bank, which has ‍not released gross domestic product figures since 2019, did not respond to requests for comment.”In the first half of 2022 we⁣ saw growth facilitated by ⁣a decrease in controls and greater use of the dollar, but then that decelerated,”⁣ said Jesus Palacios of Ecoanalitica. “Structural economic problems like scarce credit, an absence of recovery in public utilities, among others, were not resolved.”Retailers in capital Caracas ‍are offering discounts to drum up custom, but ‍merchants said many⁢ people still cannot afford to shop because of low…

Original from ‌ www.reuters.com rnrn

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