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Caribbean-Latin America
New currency challenge US dollar
2009-10-17
LEFTIST Latin American leaders agreed today on the creation of a regional currency, the Sucre, aimed at scaling back the use of the US dollar.

Nine countries of ALBA, a leftist bloc conceived by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, met in Bolivia where they vowed to press ahead with a new currency for intra-regional trade to replace the US dollar.

"The document is approved,'' said Bolivia's President Evo Morales, who is hosting the summit.

The new currency, dubbed the Sucre, would be rolled out beginning in 2010 in a non-paper form.

That move echoes the European Union's introduction of the euro precursor, the ECU, an account unit designed to tie down stable exchange rates between member states before the national currencies were scraped.

ALBA's member states are Venezuela, Bolivia, Cuba, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Honduras, Dominica, Saint Vincent and Antigua and Barbuda.

The currency, which was backed in April this year, is named after Jose Antonio de Sucre, who fought for independence from Spain alongside Venezuelan hero Simon Bolivar in the early 19th century.

The bloc also called for the replacement of the World Bank's International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, which arbitrates international contract disputes and has probed a slew of disputes involving ALBA members and western energy firms. Most ALBA members have already withdrawn from the organisation, with Ecuador announcing last July that it would pull out of the group.

Yesterday Bolivian media reported the country intents to nationalise a electricity distribution firm owned by Spain's Red de Electrica de Espana. It is just the latest in a series of nationalisations in Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia. In May, Venezuela nationalized 74 energy services firms operating in the oil-rich Maracaibo Lake region.

Bolivia's Evo Morales has indicated that parts for his country's energy and rail sectors will be nationalised.
Posted by:tipper

#9  It's kind of ironic (and very sad) that Ecuador, which used to have a currency called the "Sucre" adopted the US Dollar in 2000 to put a stop to runaway inflation. There must be something in the soil of Latin America - the people there CANNOT understand economics - or freedom, for that matter.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2009-10-17 19:20  

#8  They tried a racket like this many years ago, by creating a heavily alloyed internationalist South American gold coin. I actually have one of the things floating around somewhere.

The trouble is that leftists seem to have a learning disability when it comes to economics, among other things.

Something not mentioned in this story is that Honduras, under Zelaya, backed this new currency, but because the Hondurans are now shunned, will they still adopt it as their new currency? I would not think so.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2009-10-17 16:53  

#7  I'd bet that in a drought or famine, grain and water traded better than gold and diamonds ..

Throw in a long and hard winter, late planting or a missed season in Canada and/or the American wheat belt, and you'll see what grain will trade for.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2009-10-17 13:46  

#6  Then Argon should be used instead of gold and WTF is with the FED and Income Taxes I carry around a copy of the US Constituion (and and an Essex) and read and preach about it obssevialy incessantly lots. I get only deh stares. My simple proposal of putting a tarrif on imported slaves is going unheard in the highest courts of the land. I demand redress!

/thar you go Google.
Posted by: .5MT   2009-10-17 12:44  

#5  Yeah, every time I drive by a house which used to have an obama sign.

Agreed Pebbles; can't eat gold or silver or zimbucks (well maybe, give it a year). It is an affirmation/promise of productivity and barter.

Gold (and other rare metals and stones) made for a common currency because they could not be faked. To wear gold et al was not only a sign of status, but was a way to keep a 'money' on a person, like a debit card. I'd bet that in a drought or famine, grain and water traded better than gold and diamonds - it is all about worth at the time, and just a common language for barter.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2009-10-17 12:35  

#4  BP, nothing can stop a determined government---when gold was the standard, they used to adulterate it.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2009-10-17 11:30  

#3  Gold is great at keeping governments from inflation, but terrible in dealing with deflation.

Remember money is, at it's heart, just a proxy for the time exchanged in the economy.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2009-10-17 11:24  

#2  It is strange no country has gone back on the gold standard. Come to think of it, knowing the history of the gold standard, not so strange. Never mind.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2009-10-17 09:46  

#1  Anyone seen the 'Sucker' conversion rate yet?'
Posted by: Besoeker in Duitsland   2009-10-17 09:41  

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