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To: pallmer who wrote (5047)1/22/2003 3:07:35 PM
From: pallmer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29601
 
-- Strike-Hit Venezuela Suspends Currency Market --

By Patrick Markey

CARACAS, Venezuela (Reuters) - Venezuela on Wednesday
suspended foreign exchange trading in a desperate bid to stem
capital flight and a slide in the bolivar as the government
battled an opposition-led strike which has drained its
oil-reliant economy.

The Central Bank said it would close the foreign exchange
market for five trading days and prepare temporary currency
exchange and transfer curbs to fend off the impact of the
shutdown, which aims to force President Hugo Chavez to resign.

Finance Minister Tobias Nobrega said the government planned
also to slash its 2003 budget by 10 percent or $2.2 billion,
extend a temporary bank debit tax through 2003 and continue
with a domestic public debt swap to counter the economic damage
of the strike.

Venezuela's bolivar has tumbled more than 28 percent during
the seven-week-old work stoppage and its international reserves
have fallen. Oil output in the world's fifth-largest petroleum
exporter has been slashed by the strike to a fraction of its
normal levels.

Economists said foreign exchange controls would give the
government some short-term breathing room, but the economy
would suffer the longer the controls were maintained.

"This looks more like a knee-jerk reaction of theirs to the
currency weakness," Jose Cerritelli, a Bear Stearns Andean
economist, said. "But in the long term, people look to escape
the controls by taking their money out."

A government source told Reuters on Tuesday that the
cabinet was still not clear what currency measures it would
introduce. But the government did not plan to devalue the
bolivar for now, the source said.

The economic crunch has raised fears that Venezuela may
default on its foreign debt later this year. But the Central
Bank said the government would maintain the necessary
operations to make those debt payments.

Chavez, a fiery populist who was elected in 1998 and
survived a coup in April, has branded his foes as "terrorists"
who are trying to topple him again through an economic coup and
by draining hard currency from Venezuela. He has refused to
quit and vows to defeat the strike.

Venezuela's Trade and Production Minister Ramon Rosales
said the suspension of the exchange market aimed to halt what
he called the "attack against our international reserves."

"The aim of this measure is to preserve our reserves which
are the only guarantee of Venezuela's recovery after this oil
sabotage," Rosales told Reuters.


FALLING RESERVES, BATTLE FOR OIL

Venezuela's international reserves have fallen to $11.05
billion, a drop of 7.5 percent so far this year. The government
also has $2.85 billion in its FIEM rainy-day savings fund and
insisted recently that hard currency levels were sufficient.

Rattled by political uncertainty, the bolivar currency has
lost more than 24 percent of its value this year alone. The
central bank reference rate for the bolivar <VEBFIX=> closed
Tuesday trading down 5.1 percent at 1,849.50/1,853 bolivars.

Opposition leaders hope their strike, which began on Dec.
2, will pressure former paratrooper Chavez to agree to early
elections. They say that rather than deliver on promises to
ease poverty, he has wielded power like a dictator and driven
Venezuela toward economic ruin and Cuba-style communism.

The bitter stalemate has raised international concern after
the strike drove world oil prices to two-year highs. It has
also severely disrupted domestic fuel and food supplies,
pushing Venezuela's already weak economy deeper into recession
and stoking social unrest.

But negotiations to break the deadlock have been stalled
over the timing of possible elections. Former U.S. President
and Nobel Peace Prize winner Jimmy Carter on Tuesday proposed
to the government and the opposition a blueprint for elections
that would also end the strike.

The currency trading shutdown is the latest government
measure to combat the effects of the strike, now in its 52nd
day. Many private businesses are still closed and the fuel
shortages have forced Venezuelans to wait for hours outside
gasoline pumps.

Chavez, who led a botched coup six years before his victory
at the polls, has fought back, sending troops to seize control
of oil installations and refineries and importing food and
gasoline to offset shortages.

Strike leaders claim the government has failed to break the
stoppage. But in a first sign of a crack in the oil shutdown,
some tanker pilots in the key western oil and shipping hub of
Maracaibo went back to work this week.



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22-Jan-2003 20:03:30 GMT
Source RTRS - Reuters News