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Minimum Wage in Venezuela Plummets to Just $1 Per Month in 2025: Official Rate Follows Central Bank Exchange Rate and Exposes the Deepest Crisis of the Country’s Economy

Written by Valdemar Medeiros
Published on 30/08/2025 at 20:20
Salário mínimo na Venezuela despenca para apenas US$ 1 por mês em 2025: valor oficial segue câmbio do Banco Central e expõe a crise mais profunda da economia do país
Foto: Salário mínimo na Venezuela despenca para apenas US$ 1 por mês em 2025: valor oficial segue câmbio do Banco Central e expõe a crise mais profunda da economia do país
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Minimum Wage in Venezuela Drops to Less Than US$ 1 in 2025, While Basic Basket Costs US$ 500. Crisis Exposes Largest Economic Collapse in the Country.

In 2025, the minimum wage in Venezuela reached the lowest level in its recent history: only 130 bolívares, equivalent to less than US$ 1 per month, when converted at the official rate from the Central Bank. The amount, frozen since March 2022, no longer bears any relation to the real cost of living and exposes the seriousness of the economic crisis affecting millions of Venezuelans.

According to official data and independent surveys, the minimum wage covers less than 0.2% of the basic basket, which has a monthly value exceeding US$ 500. The discrepancy between income and food expenses has become a symbol of the state’s inability to sustain its population in the face of hyperinflation and the continued devaluation of the bolívar.

US$ 1 per Month: A Salary That Doesn’t Even Buy a Lunch

YouTube Video

The equivalence to US$ 1 per month puts the Venezuelan worker in an unprecedented condition: the official minimum wage is insufficient even to pay for a simple meal in Caracas or any other major city in the country.

This reality forces millions of families to rely on remittances from abroad, small informal jobs, or community assistance to survive. According to social research, more than 80% of the population lives in poverty, and the legal salary has had no practical impact on family income.

Central Bank Exchange Rate and Disconnection from Reality

The calculation of the minimum wage is based on the official exchange rate published by the Central Bank of Venezuela, which is far below the parallel rates practiced on the streets. This difference exacerbates the distortion of purchasing power and amplifies the feeling that the formal salary no longer reflects the country’s economic reality.

Economists claim that the lack of adjustment since 2022 is one of the factors that deepens the social crisis. Without adjustment mechanisms, formal workers remain trapped in a symbolic remuneration, while prices remain indexed to much higher market values.

Salary of US$ 1 per Month and a Basket of US$ 500

The contrast is stark: while the US$ 1 salary in Venezuela is officially paid to public servants, retirees, and grassroots workers, the cost of a monthly food basket exceeds US$ 500. This means that even when adding benefits and assistance, a family needs to multiply its formal income by more than five hundred times to ensure minimal nourishment.

This disparity explains the ongoing exodus of Venezuelans to neighboring countries. It is estimated that more than 7 million citizens have already left the country in search of better living conditions.

Social Impacts: Hunger, Exodus, and Parallel Economy

With the minimum wage of US$ 1 per month, the daily life of Venezuelans has become marked by scarcity and dependence on alternative mechanisms. Many workers have left their formal jobs to engage in informal activities, where remuneration is calculated directly in dollars or in exchange goods.

The public health and education systems are also affected, as doctors, teachers, and public servants receive salaries equivalent to less than US$ 5 monthly, which compromises the quality of services and accelerates the flight of professionals abroad.

The Collapse of the Currency and the Loss of Reference

The bolívar, which has undergone various redenominations in the past decade, has lost its function as a trusted currency. In 2025, the minimum wage in Venezuela became a symbolic value, closer to an accounting record than to a remuneration capable of sustaining the worker.

Meanwhile, the dollar and even cryptocurrencies circulate widely in commerce, functioning as parallel currency. This informal dollarization has become the true engine of the economy, leaving the official salary increasingly irrelevant.

YouTube Video

The Most Visible Face of the Venezuelan Crisis

The minimum wage of US$ 1 per month in 2025 is more than an economic figure: it is the portrait of the biggest social and financial crisis in Venezuela’s history. It reveals the government’s inability to balance exchange rates, inflation, and minimum income, while widening the gap between the population’s reality and official policy.

Without an adjustment for over three years, the value has become the ultimate symbol of an economic collapse that pushes millions of people into extreme poverty, accelerates the exodus, and reinforces the need for urgent structural solutions.

Minimum wage in Venezuela – US$ 1 per month – salary of US$ 1 per month – salary of US$ 1 in Venezuela – exchange rate of the Central Bank

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José
José
31/08/2025 16:39

O nosso presidente **** e corjas apoiam o sistema de lá e o daqui
Como isso pode ficar no poder

Magrão
Magrão
Em resposta a  José
31/08/2025 23:09

E pior. Os petistas brasileiros apoiam tudo isso como se isso fosse normal.

Francisco Fontes
Francisco Fontes
31/08/2025 14:23

Sim, é o mesmo mundo de 1989, as mesmas pessoas, os mesmos políticos e a mesma corrupção humana, que tempo vai e tempo vêm, mas nada muda realmente de fato e para melhor.

J Barrios
J Barrios
31/08/2025 09:44

A turma do L adoram isso 😁😁😁😁

José
José
Em resposta a  J Barrios
31/08/2025 11:32

Quem adora é a turma do ****! **** teve a cara de **** de aumentar R$6,00 no salário mínimo, retirar o aumento real do salário. Com **** no poder ,o Brasil já teria se transformado na Venezuela que eles tanto falavam.

Magrão
Magrão
Em resposta a  José
31/08/2025 23:10

Aqui no Brasil enquanto existir Lula, PT e petistas nosso futuro tende para isso. É só ladeira abaixo.

Naldo Calado
Naldo Calado
Em resposta a  Magrão
01/09/2025 00:36

E o bolsonarismo também.. Só esqueceu de mencionar essa **** também

Valdemar Medeiros

Formado em Jornalismo e Marketing, é autor de mais de 20 mil artigos que já alcançaram milhões de leitores no Brasil e no exterior. Já escreveu para marcas e veículos como 99, Natura, O Boticário, CPG – Click Petróleo e Gás, Agência Raccon e outros. Especialista em Indústria Automotiva, Tecnologia, Carreiras (empregabilidade e cursos), Economia e outros temas. Contato e sugestões de pauta: valdemarmedeiros4@gmail.com. Não aceitamos currículos!

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