Artisans Now Use Venezuela’s ‘Worthless Currency’ To Make Purses

Artists in the Columbian border town of Cucuta are finding creative uses for Venezuela’s worthless bolivar currency.

According to spokesman.com, artisans in Venezuela are using the Venezuelan Bolivar to make sculptures, handbags, and other things because of how worthless (devalued) the currency has become following Venezuela’s economic collapse.

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Venezuela’s congress says annual inflation hit 24,600 percent in May. The minimum wage cannot buy as little as a bottle of soft drink, so citizens have begun turning colourful bolivar bills into a purse rather than to spend them on a purse or anything else.

Alvaro Rivera is one of the artisans making products out of money.

The largest handbag Rivera sells on the streets of Cucuta is painstakingly woven from 1,000 individual bills totaling 100,000 bolivares. The value of that cash at money exchange houses in Cucuta is 17 U.S. cents. The bag, on the other hand, sells for $13.

“The price of the work has nothing to do with how many bills I use. What I’m selling is the art,” Rivera said.

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A bag of groceries, which cost $15 a year ago, now costs $3,960 in Venezuela. Those earning bolivares can no longer afford the basics.

To feed a family of five for a month costs 20 times the monthly minimum wage, according to the Center for Labor Research and Analysis, a Caracas-based nonprofit.

The crisis is forcing millions of people to flee the country.

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