The town, which is in the same region
where La Mancha cheese is made, planned to run the scheme for only a
month after it began on January 9. However, it was such a success that
the plan has been extended.
Locals are paying with pesetas in chemists, hardware stores and grocery shops among others.
Some have brought notes of up to 5,000
pesetas, worth 30 euros (£25), while many are using coins of just 50,
100 or 500 pesetas.
At the end of the project Mr Campayo
will take the money to the Bank of Spain in Madrid and exchange it for
euros before handing the notes out to the shopkeepers. So far they
have taken more than a million pesetas (£5,000).
The Bank of Spain estimates there are around £1.4billion worth of pesetas in Spain that have not been exchanged since 2002.
According to a recent study by
Spain’s consumers’ association OCU, the price of essential goods has
risen by 43 per cent since the introduction of the euro. The cost of
bread is up by 49 per cent while milk has risen 48 per cent and the
price of potatoes has increased by 116 per cent.
Town mayor Jose Julian Fernandez said he backed the scheme, adding: ‘I support any measure that helps our economy.’
More than a third of the 3,000 people
who live in Villamayor de Santiago are unemployed as Spain battles its
worst economic crisis since the Civil War.
Nearly a quarter of all Spaniards are
out of work, with half of those under the age of 25 unable to find a
job – a higher unemployment rate than even Greece or Portugal.
The situation is said to be so poor
that those who have jobs are even refusing to go on holiday in case they
are made redundant while they are away. At least four other Spanish
towns have been forced to resort back temporarily to the peseta in
recent months because of the eurozone crisis.
The news came as Spain faced even more
bad economic news yesterday, after learning the EU is likely to take
action against its new conservative government for delaying austerity
measures.
This is despite prime minister Mariano
Rajoy introducing a range of labour reforms in recent days, including
slashing severance pay.
With the economy heading back into recession, credit rating agency Moody’s also downgraded the country two notches to A3.
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