With inflation soaring, Argentina to start printing 10,000-peso notes - Los Angeles Times
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With inflation soaring, Argentina will start printing 10,000-peso notes

Hands thumb through a huge stack of peso bills.
A worker counts money at a grocery store in Buenos Aires. As prices have surged, a 10,000-peso note is set to start circulating in June.
(Natacha Pisarenko / Associated Press)
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Prices in Argentina have surged so dramatically in recent months that the government has multiplied the size of its biggest bank note in circulation by five — to 10,000 pesos, worth about $10.

The recent central bank announcement promised to lighten the load for many Argentines who must carry giant bags — occasionally, suitcases — stuffed with cash for simple transactions. Argentina’s annual inflation rate reached 287% in March, among the highest in the world.

The new denomination note is expected to hit the streets next month in a bid to “facilitate transactions between users,†the central bank said. The 10,000-peso note is worth $11 at the country’s official exchange rate and $9 at the black market exchange rate.

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Across Argentina, hard currency — specifically, the ubiquitous 1,000-peso notes — remains the most popular way to pay for things. When first printed in 2017, the 1,000-peso note was worth $58 on the black market. Now, it’s worth a dollar. The 2,000-peso note is the largest denomination in circulation.

Given the instability unleashed by Argentina’s worst financial crisis in two decades, vendors prefer cash payments for big purchases and offer steep discounts to incentivize paper bills over electronic transfers.

Argentine President Javier Milei, who took office in December, campaigned on a promise to tame inflation and stabilize the local currency by reversing the policies of past left-leaning governments that printed money to finance public spending.

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Argentina’s next president, Javier Milei, is a culture-warring Trump fan who opposes abortion, calls the pope an “imbecile†and says sex education is a Marxist plot.

But in the meantime, his harsh austerity drive has pushed prices up to levels in the U.S. and Europe, adding to the economic woes of ordinary Argentines. A nationwide strike, the latest in a series of protests, is planned for Thursday.

Even as annual inflation remains high, Milei cites a gradual slowdown in Argentina’s monthly inflation rate since December to insist his plan is working. Confident that consumer prices can continue creeping downward, policymakers lowered the central bank’s key interest rate three times last month.

The new 10,000-peso notes feature small artistic portraits of Manuel Belgrano, a founding father of Argentina, and María Remedios del Valle, a Black Argentine woman and army captain who gained fame fighting the country’s war of independence.

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Argentina’s central bank said it would introduce an even bigger bill — a 20,000-peso note — later this year.

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