National Center for Foreign Commerce

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National Center for Foreign Commerce (CENCOEX)
Centro Nacional de Comercio Exterior
Centro Nacional de Comercio Exterior (CENCOEX) logo.png
Agency overview
Formed 2015
Preceding agencies
  • Régimen de Cambio Diferencial (RECADI) (1983–2003)
  • Comisión de Administración de Divisas (CADIVI) (2003–2015)
Headquarters Caracas
Annual budget 50 billion USD (2009)
30 billion USD (2010)[1]
Parent agency Ministerio del Poder Popular de Planificación y Finanzas
Website cadivi.gob.ve

The National Center for Foreign Commerce, (Spanish: Centro Nacional de Comercio Exterior, CENCOEX),[2] formerly the Commission for the Administration of Currency Exchange (Comisión de Administración de Divisas CADIVI), is the Venezuelan government body which administers legal currency exchange in Venezuela. The official buy/sell exchange rate was initially fixed at BsF. 4.28 / BsF. 4.30[3] per US Dollar (USD). Currently the official buy/sell exchange rate is fixed at BsF. 6.3[4] per USD.

History

Timeline of Foreign Exchange Regimes [5]
Period System Classification
1964-1983 Fixed exchange rate Free capital mobility
1983-1989 RECADI Exchange Control
1989-1992 Floating exchange rate Free capital mobility
1992-1994 Microdevaluations Free capital mobility
1994-1996 OTAC Exchange Control
1996-2002 Exchange Bands Exchange Control
2002-2003 Floating exchange rate Floating controlled
2003-Today CADIVI-others Exchange Control

In 1983, a similar agency called RECADI was established to manage a system of differential exchange rates and capital controls,[6] and disbanded in 1989 when the differential exchange rate system was abolished.[7] RECADI saw widespread corruption, and became a substantial scandal in 1989 when five former ministers were arrested, although the charges were later dropped.[8]

Exchange controls under CADIVI were adopted on 5 February 2003 in an attempt to limit capital flight,[9] in the aftermath of a two-month strike/lockout aimed at toppling the government, which saw GDP fall 27% during the first four months of 2003.[10]

In 2008, the Chavez government removed three zeroes from the bolivar, thus creating a new currency known as the bolívar fuerte (eng. "bolivar") but kept the currency pegged to a higher rate against the dollar than the market value. Since 2003, this has created a scarcity of foreign currency, as confidence in the bolivar declined, and foreign exchange, especially the U.S. dollar, was in greater demand.[11]

Functions

Blue line represents implied value of VEF compared to USD. The red line represents what the Venezuelan government officially rates the VEF.
*March/April 2013 data is missing
Sources: Banco Central de Venezuela, Dolar Paralelo, Federal Reserve Bank, International Monetary Fund.

According to the Bank for International Settlements, "The Central Bank of Venezuela (BCV) fixed a monthly allocation of foreign currency to be administered by CADIVI, purchases foreign currency from residents, and sells foreign currency to the public and private sectors subject to approval from CADIVI."[12] Under Venezuelan law PDVSA must sell its foreign exchange to the Central Bank, thereby providing the bulk of foreign currency in Venezuela. The Venezuelan private sector requires more foreign exchange for imports than it generates for exports, and is dependent on the Bank to satisfy the difference.[12]

Exchange rates

The agency makes hard currency available to importers at several rates, with the best rate, CENCOEX, the official exchange rate 1 U.S. dollar for 6.3 bolivars, available to importers of food and medicine. A double rate, Complementary System of Foreign Exchange Administration (Sistema complementario de administracion de divisas (SICAD I)), twice the official exchange rate but still favorable, goes to importers of culturally important items such as Scotch, popular in Venezuela, and Barbie dolls, again, popular with certain demographics. A third rate, Alternative Foreign Exchange System (Sistema cambiario alternativo de divisas (SICAD II)), quite unfavorable at 50 times the official exchange rate, is offered to other importers.[2] The black market rate, as of late December 2014, was 173 to 1 and rising rapidly. Publication of unofficial exchange rates within Venezuela is a crime; rates are published on external sites.[2][13]

Fraud

Fraud is widespread, with importers, regulators, and ordinary citizens stealing billions from the Venezuelan economy using one mechanism or another. Importers, for example, may simply sell the hard currency on the black market and not import anything, only part of what they declared, or at grossly exaggerated prices. A regulator may change extra for exchange.[14] Venezuelans who were granted hard currency for foreign travel or study have simply "scraped" the hard currency from their credit cards and sold it while staying home. The volume of "scraping" engaged in was evident by the numerous empty seats, reserved by scrapers, on airplanes leaving Venezuela for foreign destinations.[15]

References

  1. Budget of Venezuela for 2010 "Venezuela's budget for 2010"
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. CADIVI Convenio Cambiario 2, CADIVI
  4. Gaceta oficial n° 40.108
  5. Del Recadi al Simadi: 40 años de sistemas fallidos
  6. George D. E. Philip (2003), Democracy in Latin America: surviving conflict and crisis?, Wiley-Blackwell. p143
  7. Kevin J. Middlebrook (2000), Conservative parties, the right, and democracy in Latin America, Johns Hopkins University Press. p130
  8. Damarys Canache, Michael R. Kulisheck (1998), Reinventing legitimacy: democracy and political change in Venezuela. Greenwood Publishing Group. p123
  9. CADIVI, CADIVI, una medidia necesaria
  10. Jones, Bart (2008), Hugo! The Hugo Chavez Story From Mud Hut to Perpetual Revolution, London: The Bodley Head. p386
  11. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Bank for International Settlements (2005), "BIS Papers No 24: Foreign exchange market intervention in emerging markets: motives, techniques and implications", May 2005
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External links

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