Caracas — Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on Sunday signed an emergency decree ordering the country’s largest banknote, the 100 bolivar bill, taken out of circulation to thwart "mafias" he accused of hoarding cash in Colombia. The announcement came as the government of Venezuela — a country in the midst of an economic crisis and crippled with the world’s highest inflation — prepares to issue new banknotes and coins in values up to 200 times the highest denomination currently available. The 100 bolivar bill is worth fewer than three cents of a dollar at current market rates. One bill can barely cover the cost of a sweet, while a stack of 50 notes is needed to buy a hamburger. "In accordance with my constitutional powers and through this emergency economic decree, I have decided to take the 100 bolivar bill out of circulation in the next 72 hours," the president said on Sunday on his TV show "Contact with Maduro". Maduro claimed the move was necessary after a Venezuelan investigat...

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