Author Topic: Socialist Venezuela Goes Bust  (Read 285 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

rangerrebew

  • Guest
Socialist Venezuela Goes Bust
« on: May 27, 2016, 09:47:53 pm »
Socialist Venezuela Goes Bust
 
Posted by Vijeta Uniyal      Thursday, May 26, 2016 at 11:00am

http://legalinsurrection.com/2016/05/socialist-venezuela-goes-bust/

Country sells remaining gold reserves as economy plunges deeper
Venezuela Economic Crisis 2016   

What could be seen as the final act in Venezuela’s worsening economic crisis, the Latin American country has begun selling its remaining gold reserves. Just three year after the death of its socialist leader, Venezuela — once a leading oil producer — is on the verge of bankruptcy.

It is yet another ‘miracle of socialism’ that a country with the world’s largest oil reserves can go almost broke. Venezuela’s total oil reserves stand at an estimated 296.5 billion barrels, which is higher than Saudi Arabia’s 265.4 billion barrels. But the cash-strapped country is struggling to get investments and technical expertise to convert its oil reserves into revenue.

Socialist leader Hugo Chávez got elected as country’s President in 1999 and introduced the ideology of “Socialism of the 21st Century”. Chávez enacted a new constitution, taking control of the state and the economy to carry out his “socialist revolution”.

Chávez, and later his protégé Nicolás Maduro, managed to win consecutive elections largely due to their policies of social redistribution — but as it always happens — they have finally run out of other people’s money. British newspaper Financial Times reports:

    [Venezuela’s] gold reserves have dropped almost a third over the past year and it sold over 40 tonnes in February and March, according to IMF data. Gold now makes up almost 70 per cent of the country’s total reserves, which fell to a low of $12.1bn last week.

    Venezuela has larger crude reserves than Saudi Arabia but has been hard hit by years of mismanagement and, more recently, depressed prices for oil. Oil accounts for 95 per cent of its export earnings. Despite the recent price rebound, declining oil output is likely to take a further toll on the economy.

    The IMF forecasts the economy will shrink 8 per cent this year, and 4.5 per cent in 2017, after a 5.7 per cent contraction in 2015. Inflation is forecast to exceed 1,642 per cent next year, fuelled by printing money to fund a fiscal deficit estimated at about 17 per cent of gross domestic product.

Democratic presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders might prefer to distance himself from Chávez and his socialist legacy, but admiration for Venezuela’s socialist experiment goes a long way with American progressives and liberals. Sander’s top advisor and his pick for the Democratic Party’s platform committee, Cornel West is a fervent devotee of Venezuelan dictator.

In 2006, on the eve of Venezuelan presidential elections, Cornel West along with the usual suspects like Jesse Jackson and Tom Hayden, endorsed Chávez in an open letter praising his policy of sharing “country’s oil wealth with millions of poor Venezuelans.” West tweeted in 2010 saying “I love that Hugo Chavez has made poverty a major priority. I wish America would make poverty a priority.” Now we all know, how foresighted “El Comandante” was when he made “poverty a major priority” for the Venezuelan people.

But don’t hold your breath if you are expecting liberals to realise the folly of falling for yet another third-world charlatan promising a socialist heaven of earth. Those riding the Bernie Clown Car have long lost touch with the reality.

The liberals share this strand of insanity with those running the show in Venezuela. Instead of taking responsibility and trying to fix the country’s crisis, President Maduro is busy blaming the U.S. for the economic mess that he and his mentor Chávez have driven their country into.

But who knows? Maybe his friends in Hollywood would buy that story. Sean Penn could direct the movie, starring Michael Moor as the loudmouth Venezuelan dictator.

VIDEO: Venezuelan Economic Crisis
« Last Edit: May 27, 2016, 09:48:51 pm by rangerrebew »

geronl

  • Guest
Re: Socialist Venezuela Goes Bust
« Reply #1 on: May 27, 2016, 11:20:53 pm »
$170 hamburgers...

http://therightscoop.com/hamburgers-cost-170-in-the-miserable-socialist-paradise-of-venezuela/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=facebook

Quote
A hamburger sold for 1,700 Venezuelan bolivares is $170, or a 69,000-bolivar hotel room is $6,900 a night, based on the official rate of 10 bolivares for $1.

But of course no merchant is pricing at the official rate imposed under currency controls. It’s the black market rate of 1,000 bolivares per dollar that’s applied.

Read more: http://therightscoop.com/hamburgers-cost-170-in-the-miserable-socialist-paradise-of-venezuela/#ixzz49twl64ZF

Online mountaineer

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 79,943
Re: Socialist Venezuela Goes Bust
« Reply #2 on: May 28, 2016, 12:11:43 am »
How Venezuela Fell Into Crisis, and What Could Happen Next
By RICK GLADSTONE
MAY 27, 2016
Quote
Supermarket shelves in Venezuela are chronically bare, and power shortages are so severe that government offices are now open only two days a week. The health care system has collapsed, the crime rate is one of the world’s worst, and inflation is rapidly eroding what remains of the currency’s value.

“The economy has gone from bad to worse to horrific,” said Jason Marczak, director of the Latin America Economic Growth Initiative at the Atlantic Council, a Washington-based research organization. “The Venezuelan government is doing a good job of leading itself into chaos.”

Here are some basic questions and answers on how Venezuela got to this point under President Nicolás Maduro and what could happen next.

How could this happen in a country that has the largest reserves of oil in the world?

The price of oil, Venezuela’s only significant export, has plummeted, which means revenue could fall by 40 percent this year. The government’s huge borrowing, partly a legacy of the years when oil prices were far higher, has helped bring the crisis to a head because Venezuela now has far less money to repay its foreign debt, forcing Mr. Maduro to slash imports in order to avoid default.

On top of that are the consequences of a drought, which has shriveled the country’s hydropower generation, a critical source of electricity.

Is the situation going to get worse or better in the coming months?

The country owes roughly $120 billion to foreign creditors and must make a payment of nearly $7 billion this year, most of it in the final quarter. Speculation has persisted that Venezuela may default on the payment or have to default next year, especially if oil prices remain low.

Venezuela’s problems have been worsening for years, since well before Mr. Maduro took power. What is different now?

The political opposition in Venezuela is far more unified than it was during the era of Mr. Maduro’s popular predecessor, Hugo Chávez. He died in 2013, but many economists say his policies of state ownership, unfettered spending, subsidies and domestic price controls are at least partly responsible for the crisis today.

With Mr. Chávez gone, Mr. Maduro’s opponents have won a majority of seats in the national legislature and have collected nearly two million signatures on a petition to start a recall of Mr. Maduro.   ...
Rest of article at NY Times
Support Israel's emergency medical service. afmda.org