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When The Official Dollar Is Fiction: Bolivia's Quiet Currency Reset
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) For most Bolivians, the dollar story starts at the ATM. You ask for dollars. The bank shrugs. The official rate on the wall says one thing; the rate on the street, in WhatsApp groups and on crypto-style apps says something very different.
For years, the state insisted that the“real” price was fixed around 6.96 bolivianos per dollar. The country's economy quietly moved on. This year the gap became impossible to hide.
Foreign-exchange reserves, once above $15 billion during the gas boom, have sunk to well under $2 billion. Importers struggled to pay for fuel, medicines and spare parts. An underground market exploded, with the dollar at one point trading near 20 bolivianos.
Ordinary people learned a hard rule: you can print an official rate, but you cannot print dollars. Faced with this, the central bank has created a new daily“reference band” for the currency.
On its first day it came out at 7.85 for buying and 9.32 for selling – still far from the parallel rate, but much closer to what banks actually charge. The buying side reflects wholesale trades; the selling side adds costs for sending money abroad and sets the maximum banks may bill clients.
On paper, this looks technical. In reality, it is political. Bolivia 's economic model has relied on heavy state control, cheap subsidised prices and a strong, fixed exchange rate presented as a social achievement.
The new reference rate is a discreet admission that this model no longer fits the facts. For expats and foreign investors, the change matters for three reasons. It offers a single, public number instead of a fog of rumours.
It shows that today's authorities are at least willing to inch toward transparency and market signals rather than simply blaming“speculators.” And it turns Bolivia into a warning for other countries tempted to freeze their exchange rate while reserves drain away.
The official peg still exists on paper. But with every new daily reference, Bolivia moves a little closer to a future in which the exchange rate is set less by politics and more by reality.
For years, the state insisted that the“real” price was fixed around 6.96 bolivianos per dollar. The country's economy quietly moved on. This year the gap became impossible to hide.
Foreign-exchange reserves, once above $15 billion during the gas boom, have sunk to well under $2 billion. Importers struggled to pay for fuel, medicines and spare parts. An underground market exploded, with the dollar at one point trading near 20 bolivianos.
Ordinary people learned a hard rule: you can print an official rate, but you cannot print dollars. Faced with this, the central bank has created a new daily“reference band” for the currency.
On its first day it came out at 7.85 for buying and 9.32 for selling – still far from the parallel rate, but much closer to what banks actually charge. The buying side reflects wholesale trades; the selling side adds costs for sending money abroad and sets the maximum banks may bill clients.
On paper, this looks technical. In reality, it is political. Bolivia 's economic model has relied on heavy state control, cheap subsidised prices and a strong, fixed exchange rate presented as a social achievement.
The new reference rate is a discreet admission that this model no longer fits the facts. For expats and foreign investors, the change matters for three reasons. It offers a single, public number instead of a fog of rumours.
It shows that today's authorities are at least willing to inch toward transparency and market signals rather than simply blaming“speculators.” And it turns Bolivia into a warning for other countries tempted to freeze their exchange rate while reserves drain away.
The official peg still exists on paper. But with every new daily reference, Bolivia moves a little closer to a future in which the exchange rate is set less by politics and more by reality.
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