Answer:
By devaluating the bolivar, the president of Venezuela has increased the number of bolivars needed to buy one dollar.
Step-by-step explanation:
Devaluation is a form of currency reform that involves writing down the value of a currency with a fixed exchange rate. The opposite of devaluation is revaluation. At a floating exchange rate, a decrease in the value of the currency is called a depreciation and it is not possible to control a depreciation. A devaluation is usually done with the aim of improving the country's current account, ie the net of a country's business with foreign countries. A devaluation benefits exports and hinders imports. People who borrowed money in foreign currency are disadvantaged. As a devaluation makes imported goods more expensive in terms of domestic currency, inflation risks increasing.