You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Caribbean-Latin America
Hugo Feels the Pinch
2008-10-20
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has delighted in the economic meltdown in the United States, mocking the Bush administration for its bailout plan and predicting the end of American economic dominance. "The U.S. model of capitalism is collapsing," Chavez, a self-avowed socialist, told reporters recently.

The price of a barrel of oil has fallen from $147 in July to less than $70, and analysts say the drop is a blow to Chavez's free-spending administration, which depends on oil for 50 percent of government revenue and 95 percent of its export earnings.
But Venezuela's oil-fueled economy is deeply intertwined with the United States and is poised to face major challenges as the crisis pushes down the price of crude, economic analysts and oil experts say. The price of a barrel of oil has fallen from $147 in July to less than $70, and analysts say the drop is a blow to Chavez's free-spending administration, which depends on oil for 50 percent of government revenue and 95 percent of its export earnings. Other oil-producing countries, which like Venezuela ramped up spending as the price of oil rose to historic highs in recent years, also face serious economic problems, analysts say.

Robert Bottome, editor of Veneconomia, a Caracas business newsletter, said that if the price continues to fall, Chavez's populist government will face economic turmoil. "The common perception is that the Venezuelan government goes bankrupt," he said, "that they cannot meet their obligations."

Chavez has said that such prognostications are wishful thinking generated by his foes and that Venezuela, with $40 billion in Central Bank reserves, will ride out the storm. He is among the leaders in OPEC, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, who will attend an emergency meeting Friday that could lead to a production cut to boost prices. "Many want the oil price to continue to drop to see us fail, but Venezuela is not going to go under," said Chavez, who has built what he calls his Bolivarian revolution by exporting oil to the United States.

But perhaps more than any oil-exporting country, Venezuela could be particularly exposed if the worldwide financial meltdown continues. That would slow economic growth, reduce the need for petroleum products and further drive down oil prices. Venezuela exports about 1.4 million barrels daily to the United States, about 10 percent of U.S. oil imports.

The dire predictions come as the inflation rate in Venezuela has surpassed 36 percent and the black market rate for dollars has shot well beyond the fixed government rate. JP Morgan, in a research note this month, predicted that economic growth in Venezuela would reach 5 percent this year and 2.5 percent next year. Last year, the economy grew by 8.4 percent. "Venezuela is the one that's in the most difficult position, relative to the other OPEC countries," said RoseAnne Franco, lead analyst on Latin America for PFC Energy, a consulting firm in Washington.

PFC Energy said in a report that oil must be at least $94 a barrel to ensure Venezuela's macroeconomic stability this year and generate enough money to pay for imports. Although Chavez frequently touts his country's independence from Washington, Venezuela is more reliant than ever on the food, auto parts, medicine, construction materials and other products it imports from the United States and Colombia, a close U.S. ally.
Posted by:Fred

#21  Hugo is in a curious pickle, like most south of the border tinpots. Argentina tried to break the mold by taking on UK, but thankfully Lady Thatcher was around to stop that - the rest of SA tyrants don't have the typical outlet of tyrants elsewhere - namely attack the neighbor. Bolivarian solidarity and all that make for a tricky situation - more amenable to the low-level meddling like the Sandanistas, or purely internal suppression.

Hugo's courting trouble already within Venezuela, and risks disaster if he tries anything overt against Colombia, and doesn't have any other useful enemies. There's little chance he could provoke us into anything approaching the Cuban situation - where we have our own axes to grind.

Unfortunately, ZimBob Mugabe is probably the likeliest mentor for him to follow - horrible for locals, not much effect on the rest of us.
Posted by: Don Vito Omeling5062   2008-10-20 21:28  

#20  800,000 barrels/day at $70/barrel is over $20B/year. That will support 250,000 middle class jobs or 750K-1M jobs if you consider that the money will circulate 3-4 times in a year instead of leaving the country.

That's what it is really about. Starving the middle class into pissed off lower class voters.
Posted by: ed   2008-10-20 21:23  

#19  Deflation. BOHICA for all the POS. heh
Posted by: Last Breath Farm Resident   2008-10-20 19:47  

#18  Damn them all to hell.
Posted by: ed 2008-10-20 18:07


DOUBLE damn them all.... and Bernacke and Paulson along with them.

Posted by: Besoeker   2008-10-20 18:08  

#17  The US gov wish pipe dream plan is for Canada to ramp up by 3 million barrels/day their oil sands production to replace, if required, Venezuelan and Saudi imports. Though I'm not sure how many Canadians will agree.

This while there are many untapped energy reserves at home. ANWAR alone could already be producing 800,000 barrels a day or over 15% of US production, replacing the majority of Venezuelan imports. But our so called "leaders" are too damned myopic and vested in their little D.C. power games to actually lead the country into a sane future. Damn them all to hell.
Posted by: ed   2008-10-20 18:07  

#16  I wonder if we'll be seeing the steady stream of 1-800-Joe-4-Oil ads this winter.
Posted by: Woozle Unusosing8053   2008-10-20 15:37  

#15  The only country that pays cash for Hugo's oil is the US, the rest buy on easy credit terms. Cashflow as Hugo knows it would change in an instant if we stopped buying Venezuelan oil.
Posted by: Minister of funny walks   2008-10-20 14:43  

#14  Who knows, maybe Hugo will get his Allende moment yet. It's not like he doesn't have one coming for all the idiocy he's promulgated.
Posted by: Jolutch Mussolini7800   2008-10-20 12:07  

#13  The Venezuelan economy is poised for collapse and the Venezuelan people are going to suffer greatly.

10-1 BoBo isn't going to be hung by angry mobs when it happens either.
Posted by: DarthVader   2008-10-20 11:10  

#12  Chavez has compounded Venezuela's problems in several ways. He has underinvested in the oil sector and Venezuelan production has dropped. That drop, as much as 500,000 bbd, was masked by the rapid increase in prices, but will exacerbate the revenue drop as prices come down. Second, he has subsidized domestic consumption of oil, which has left less for revenue producing exports. Third, he has taken over most private farms, turning Venezuela, once self sufficient in food, into a massive importer of basic foodstuffs. Fourth, he has corrupted the financial sector, which now depends on government business for profits. Finally, he has nationalized most non-oil basic industries, which has left them unproductive.

The Venezuelan economy is poised for collapse and the Venezuelan people are going to suffer greatly.
Posted by: DoDo   2008-10-20 10:59  

#11  The problem is that it takes much more refining productivity and cost to break down his crude to gasoline and No. 2 fuel oil. If bunker C is goo - Venezuela crude is tar pitch. High sulfur also. Not the most environmentally friendly. There is some emulsification that can take place to allow to burn in atomized burners for power but it is more costly. Oil needs to be over $90 for them to net out.
Posted by: Jack is Back!   2008-10-20 08:42  

#10  Capitalism: "Rumors of my death are greatly exaggerated".

Socialism, being parasitic in nature, requires capitalism to feed off of.
Posted by: Ulusoling Hatfield4645   2008-10-20 08:21  

#9  hindsight is 20 20. bobo failed to capitalize on the bubble in oil prices, unlike Saudi Arabia who pumped for all they were worth capturing a larger share of the bubbles, venezoo actually had declining production, believing that the bubble could be made to go higher through scarcity. now the price has receeded, and bobos production is still falling, his 40 billion will become 20 then 10 then 5. some suggest he will cut back on his adventures in modernizing his military....but he wont, again he'll increase his spending believing it will add too his power....it wont battle field assets are only as durable as the oppositions ability to counterprogram them, here too bobo, has mistook the essence and nature of bubbles.Soviet willingness to aid bobo in his end run around moral certaintude, speaks to the regularity of what lenin characterizes as long lines of useful idiots....who the revolution can always count upon, to meet the CPU's demand for extemporaneous largesse.

Posted by: Spiny Gl 2511   2008-10-20 08:03  

#8  The US gets 10% of its oil imports from him. Arrgh.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2008-10-20 03:16  

#7  We will know he has a problem if he cuts back his orders for aircraft, tanks and guns (unless he plans to use them to reinforce FARC in invading his neighbors).
Posted by: tipover   2008-10-20 01:44  

#6  But since then Hugo bought a new place and he can't face the mortgages.
Posted by: JFM   2008-10-20 01:41  

#5  Venezuela was making plenty of money two and a half years ago, when oil was about the price it is now.
Posted by: Tranquil Mechanical Yeti   2008-10-20 01:29  

#4  OT --- Sea -- I think there have been a couple of APB's out for you. Just so you know.... it's nice to be missed.
Posted by: Sherry   2008-10-20 01:06  

#3  Go hit up Joe Kennedy for some spare change, Oogo.
Posted by: Seafarious   2008-10-20 01:03  

#2  Hang in there, Hugo. Three months and you should be able to get the US foreign aid you're requesting.
Posted by: KBK   2008-10-20 00:32  

#1  That's the thing about central bank money. One minute it's there, and the next, it's gone, as if by magic.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2008-10-20 00:25  

00:00