Logo Title
obverse
reverse
gef
Venezuela
Context
Year: 1967
Issuer: Venezuela Issuer flag
Period:
(1953—1999)
Currency:
(1879—2007)
Demonetization: 31 December 2011
Total mintage: 180,000,000
Material
Diameter: 23 mm
Weight: 5 g
Thickness: 1.7 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Nickel
Magnetic: Yes
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard42
Numista: #2972
Value
Exchange value: 1 VEB

Obverse

Description:
Venezuela's coat of arms above, date to right of denomination below.
Inscription:
★REPÚBLICA DE VENEZUELA★

UN BOLÍVAR ★ 1967
Translation:
★REPUBLIC OF VENEZUELA★

ONE BOLIVAR ★ 1967
Script: Latin
Language: Spanish

Reverse

Description:
Bust left, flanked by legend, engraver's name below.
Inscription:
BOLÍVAR LIBERTADOR

BARRE
Translation:
Bolivar Liberator

Barre
Script: Latin
Language: Spanish

Edge

Milled

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint (Tower Hill)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1967180,000,000

Historical background

In 1967, Venezuela's currency, the bolívar, was a symbol of national stability and economic strength, standing in stark contrast to the hyperinflation and crisis that would define the country decades later. This period fell within the "Punto Fijo" democratic era, a time of relative political stability following the 1958 overthrow of the military dictatorship. The bolívar was not only strong domestically but was also internationally respected, with a fixed exchange rate pegged to the US dollar at 4.30 bolívares per dollar, a rate established in 1964 and maintained with considerable foreign exchange reserves.

This monetary stability was fundamentally underpinned by the nation's booming oil industry. Venezuela was a global petroleum powerhouse and a founding member of OPEC, with oil revenues fueling massive public works, industrialization, and a growing middle class. The government's fiscal discipline and substantial hard currency inflows from oil exports allowed the Central Bank of Venezuela to confidently back the bolívar's fixed parity. Consequently, the country experienced low inflation and the bolívar was often considered a "hard currency" within Latin America, even circulating in neighboring countries as a preferred medium of exchange.

However, this apparent golden age contained the seeds of future vulnerability. The economy was overwhelmingly dependent on a single commodity, creating a structural weakness. While the fixed exchange rate provided stability, it also masked underlying inflationary pressures from government spending and reduced the competitiveness of non-oil exports. In 1967, these issues were manageable, but the era established a pattern of relying on oil wealth to maintain monetary policy, a dependency that would prove disastrous when oil prices eventually fluctuated and fiscal discipline eroded in later decades.
🌱 Very Common