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Latin American Trade Bloc Turns Back On Dollar

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  • Latin American Trade Bloc Turns Back On Dollar

    LATIN AMERICAN TRADE BLOC TURNS BACK ON DOLLAR

    Panorama.am
    15:47 19/10/2009

    The Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA), an association
    of the Latin American trade bloc, agreed to stop using U.S. dollars
    for regional commerce from next year, AP reported Saturday.

    The leaders of the nine ALBA members met in Cochabamba, Bolivia
    on Friday and Saturday and agreed to introduce a new currency, the
    Unified Regional Compensation System or SUCRE, early next year. SUCRE
    is a virtual currency and there will be no bills issued in SUCRE. It
    will be used for electronic payment, and each country can withdraw
    the equivalent in its own currency.

    ALBA countries hope to develop SUCRE into something like the euro,
    and use it commercially in trade with countries outside the bloc. But
    the nine leaders could not agree when they will start doing that.

    SUCRE is the name of the Ecuadorian currency used until 2000, when it
    was replaced by the dollar. It is named after Venezuelan independence
    leader Antonio Jose de Sucre (1795-1830).

    ALBA was formed under the leadership of then-Cuban president Fidel
    Castro and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez in December 2004. Members
    are Antigua and Barbuda, Bolivia, Cuba, Dominica, Ecuador, Honduras,
    Nicaragua, Saint Vincent and Venezuela.

    After the ALBA summit, Chavez told the press OPEC, Iran and Russia
    had suggested the idea of not using the U.S. dollar when paying for
    oil and that Venezuela welcomes the proposal, Reuters reported.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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