New banknotes stripped of five zeros entered circulation in Venezuela on Monday as part of President Nicolas Maduro’s radical plan to curb hyperinflation, but business leaders branded the move as counterproductive.
The country appeared paralysed.
Most shops and businesses closed as Venezuelans reacted nervously to the issuing of the new “sovereign bolivar,” launched to replace the oil-rich, cash-strapped country’s crippled “strong bolivar.”
But Carlos Larrazabal, president of leading business association, Fedecamaras, said the measure would only “increase economic instability.”
Having been suspended for more than 12 hours on Sunday, electronic transactions resumed amid palpable uncertainty.
“We’re all in the same boat, waiting to see what will happen,” Maria Sanchez, a 39-year-old shopkeeper said after withdrawing some cash.
Alongside the bolivar redenomination, Maduro announced other measures to tackle widespread poverty, including a 3,400% hike in the minimum wage, the fifth such move this year alone.
“That’s a crazy measure,” Henkel Garcia, director of consultancy group Econometrica, said.
Larrazabal said it “could devastate companies’ already debilitated assets.”
Inflation that the International Monetary Fund predicts will reach 1mn% this year rendered the old bolivar currency practically worthless, while the economic crisis has driven more than 2mn people to flee the country, according to the United Nations. In a video broadcast on Monday night on Facebook, Maduro said the launch of the new bank notes had gone smoothly, insisting “the banking system performed wonderfully.”
He also issued a vague threat to companies to comply with the minimum wage increase. 
“Otherwise, they will have to answer to us,” Maduro said without explaining what punishment there might be.
On the border with Brazil, the flow of fleeing people continued despite some 1,200 being driven back over the weekend in anti-migrant violence that got so bad President Michel Temer sent troops to the area to restore order.
“The Venezuelan people bear the tragic cost of the Maduro regime’s rampant corruption and tyranny,” tweeted US Vice President Mike Pence, adding that “recent moves will only make life worse for every Venezuelan.”
“Nicolas Maduro and his regime have driven a once-prosperous country to economic ruin and humanitarian crisis,” Pence said. The embattled Maduro, a former bus driver and union leader, said the country needed to show “fiscal discipline” and stop the excessive money printing of recent years.
In the capital, Caracas, residents were sceptical about the new measures, not least since former president Hugo Chavez slashed three zeros from the bolivar 10 years ago without halting hyperinflation.
“Everything will stay the same, prices will continue to rise,” 39-year-old Bruno Choy, who runs a street food stand, said.
Angel Arias, a 67-year-old retiree, dubbed the new currency a “pure lie!”
Three of the country’s leading opposition groups — Primero Justicia, Voluntad Popular and Causa R — have called for a general strike and day of protests.
Government loyalist and president of the controversial regime-dominated legislature, Diosdado Cabello responded on Monday by announcing a “counter-march.”
One of Maduro’s most baffling reforms has been to anchor the new currency to the country’s widely discredited cryptocurrency, the petro.
Each petro will be worth about $60, based on the price of a barrel of Venezuelan oil.
In the new currency, that will be 3,600 bolivars — signalling a massive devaluation.
In turn, the minimum wage will be fixed at half a petro — 1,800 bolivars, about $28.
Information Minister Jorge Rodriguez insisted the reform programme would be funded “with oil income, with taxes and income from gasoline price hikes.”
Maduro also announced a curb on heavily subsidised fuel in a bid to prevent oil being smuggled to other countries.
Fuel subsidies have cost Venezuela $10bn since 2012, according to oil analyst Luis Oliveros, but without them, most people would not be able to buy fuel.
The blows kept coming on Monday as US oil giant ConocoPhillips said Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA had agreed to make a $2bn settlement to halt the seizure of its Caribbean assets.
ConocoPhillips seized $750mn of PDVSA assets in May after winning two international arbitration cases against Venezuela for the “unlawful and uncompensated expropriation” of its heavy crude oil projects in the country by Chavez in 2007.
Earlier this month, a US court had also ruled that Canadian mining company Crystallex could seize shares in PDVSA’s US-based subsidiary Citgo as payment for a $1.2bn debt.
Now in a fourth year of recession, Venezuela has been hamstrung by shortages of basic goods such as food and medicine, and paralysed public services, including water, electricity and transport.
Oil production accounts for 96% of Venezuela’s revenue — but that has slumped to a 30-year low of 1.4mn barrels a day, compared to its record high of 3.2mn 10 years ago.