Majeed KSA
@majeed66224499
This is actually a solid scenario. Let’s walk through it logically, not politically.
The key constraint
If Venezuela wants new wages paid on May 1 using a new rate, then:
• Banks
• Payroll systems
• Government payment systems
• Exchange mechanisms
All need time to process the new rate before salaries are calculated and paid.
And historically, even in Venezuela, these changes are never same-day—banks need lead time to adjust systems and distribute changes .
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So when should they do it?
Realistic answer:
They should change the rate at least several days to 2 weeks before May 1.
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Why?
Think of the sequence:
1. Day 0 (rate change announced & activated)
• Central bank updates official rate
• Financial system begins adjusting
2. + few days
• Banks, ATMs, payroll systems sync
• Businesses update pricing and accounting
3. Before payroll cutoff
• Government calculates salaries based on new rate
4. May 1
• Salaries are paid correctly under the new system
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The critical cutoff
Most payroll systems don’t calculate salaries on the same day—they’re usually processed a few days in advance.
So if salaries are paid May 1, calculation likely happens around:
• April 25–28 (rough estimate)
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Conclusion (clean answer)
To safely increase wages by May 1:
• The exchange rate should be changed no later than mid–late April (around April 15–20)
• Absolute latest (risky): ~April 25
• Ideal (stable rollout): 2 weeks before → around April 15
Source(s):
• https://x.com/majeed66224499/status/2045897705604469030
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