Venezuela minimum wage to rise by 50% 'to combat inflation' Published duration 9 January 2017

image copyright EPA/MIRAFLORES image caption Mr Maduro announced the measure on his weekly TV programme

Venezuela's government has announced a 50% increase in the minimum wage and pensions amid runaway inflation.

President Nicolas Maduro says the move will protect jobs and incomes. Critics say it may worsen the crisis.

The opposition accuses Mr Maduro of mismanaging oil-rich Venezuela's crumbling economy. But he says he faces an economic war by political foes and hostile businessmen.

The International Monetary Fund says inflation will reach 1,600% this year.

Mr Maduro said he was raising the monthly minimum wage to 40,000 bolivars, about $60 (£49) at the official exchange rate, or $12 on the black market.

It is the fifth increase in one year. The measure would benefit public workers, the armed forces and pensioners, he said.

"In times of economic war and mafia attacks... we must protect employment and workers' income," he said on his weekly television and radio programme.

image copyright Reuters image caption The country has faced shortages of many goods and people have had to queue at supermarkets

Venezuela's inflation rate, the highest in the world, has gutted the value of the bolivar.

The country has been hit by low oil prices, its key export. It has also faced severe shortages of food, medicine and basic goods.

Opponents say the president's incompetence and 17 years of failed socialist policies are behind the crisis. They call for the removal of Mr Maduro, who was elected in 2013 for a six-year term after his predecessor Hugo Chavez's death.

But the president accuses the country's elite of sabotaging the economy for political ends.

The main business association in Venezuela said the wage increase was announced without consultation and could result in layoffs and force small businesses to close.

Opposition lawmaker Jose Guerra said the Central Bank would print more money to pay for the rise, resulting in higher inflation. "This has already been studied," he said on Twitter (in Spanish).

Correction 18 January 2017: An incorrect reference to the "highest" official exchange rate has been removed