Venezuelan Authorities to Combat Foreign Currency Scam with Fingerprint
Devices

Oct 7th 2013, by Ewan Robertson
[image: The machines ensure that dollar-loaded credit cards can only be
used by those who actually travel abroad (Google)]

The machines ensure that dollar-loaded credit cards can only be used by
those who actually travel abroad (Google)

Mérida, 7th October 2013 (Venezuelanalysis.com) Venezuelan authorities will
install fingerprint devices in airports and other border posts to prevent
foreign-bound Venezuelans committing a currency scam known as “the scrape”.

The scam involves taking advantage of the difference between the official
exchange rate (BsF6.3 = $1) and the higher black market exchange rate
between the Bolivar and foreign currencies.

Currency exchange controls have been in place in Venezuela since 2003 to
prevent capital flight, and citizens are allocated annual amounts of
dollars for specific activities such as travel and foreign study.

A citizen planning to travel is given their dollar allocation after buying
a flight ticket, with a small portion of the dollars handed out inside
Venezuela, and the majority of the currency loaded onto their credit card
for purchases abroad.

A scam taking advantage of the situation is called “the scrape”, where
citizens travel abroad and then use card transactions to receive most of
their dollars in cash; “scraping” their card clean. Rather than spending
the money abroad, they then return back to Venezuela and sell the dollars
for up to seven times their official value.

As well as this, groups of people buy flights tickets to access their
dollar allocation and then send their cards abroad with an acquaintance who
returns with all of the cash for sale on the black market. Authorities have
indicated that organised gangs are also involved in the scheme.

The practice appears to have taken off this year as the dollar’s back
market price has ballooned, making the scam more lucrative. Along with
other abuses of the currency system by “ghost” import companies, organised
crime and corruption, such practices hurt the Venezuelan economy by
undermining the national currency.

A further side effect of “the scrape” is that flights abroad from Venezuela
are fully booked months in advance, and ticket prices have tripled in some
cases. However many of the planes leave with empty seats belonging to
people who only buy the flight ticket to access foreign currency and take
part in “the scrape”.

*Measures*

Authorities and airline representatives have met in recent weeks to design
strategies to crack down on “the scrape”.

One of the main measures announced is the installation of fingerprint
machines in airports and other border posts to prevent no show passengers
from accessing their dollars. Foreign currency allocations will only be
activated on a traveller’s credit card once they are about to fly.

“The game is up for these people. We’ve been meeting with [a range of
Venezuelan authorities]. We’re transferring them the information of which
passengers are actually leaving the country,” said Luis Semprún Van
Greiken, president of the Association of Venezuelan Airlines (ALAV) last
week.

The finger print machines will be installed by the Identification and
Migration Administration Service (Saime) and the government’s foreign
exchange commission Cadivi.

“The idea is that everyone passing through this filter has the same
treatment,” said the Saime director general, Juan Carlos Dugarte in a press
release.

Further, the attorney general’s office is to dispatch a team of
investigators to crack down on abuses of the currency control system.

A reform to the Law Against Illicit Currency Exchange is also being
studied, which would increase penalties for those engaging in “the scrape”.

Local consumer group Anauco has opposed the fingerprint scheme, arguing
that it will cause longer queues in airports and that authorities could use
other means to monitor which passengers with foreign currency allocations
actually take their flight.

The rising gap between the official and black-market dollar rates
accompanies other economic difficulties for Venezuela this year, including
an annualised inflation rate of 45% and scarcity in some basic products
such as toilet paper.

The conservative opposition blames these problems on government
mismanagement and policies such as price and currency controls.

However, President Nicolas Maduro has argued that the situation is being
caused by an “economic war” waged by national and international economic
actors close to the opposition.

The Venezuelan Central Bank, government ministers and currency authorities
are currently studying reforms to the country’s currency controls, which
are expected to be announced in the near future.
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*Source URL (retrieved on 07/10/2013 - 4:42pm):*
http://venezuelanalysis.com/news/10077

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