It seems as though each passing day brings yet another piece of bad
economic news coming out of Venezuela. For months, I have been tracking the
decline of Venezuela’s economy and its currency, the bolivar. As if a
collapsing currency, and the resulting inflation and empty shelves weren’t bad
enough, Venezuela is now struggling with massive blackouts. Forget the Whig
interpretation of history; Venezuela supports the schoolboys’ interpretation:
“it’s just one damn thing after another.”
Venezuela’s downward economic spiral began in earnest when Hugo Chavez
imposed his “unique” brand of socialism on Venezuela. For years, the country
has sustained a massive social spending program, combined with costly price and
labor-market controls, as well as an aggressive foreign aid strategy. This
fiscal house of cards has been kept afloat—barely—by oil revenues.
But, as the price tag of the regime has grown, the country has dipped more
and more into the coffers of its state-owned oil company, PDVSA, and
(increasingly) relied on the country’s central bank to fill the fiscal gap.
This has resulted in a steady decline in the bolivar’s value — a decline that
only accelerated as news of Chavez’s failing health began to emerge.
Hugo Chavez died on March 5, 2013 — sending shockwaves through the
Venezuelan economy. Not surprisingly, in the months since his hand-picked
successor, Nicolas Maduro, took the reins as Venezuela’s new president, the
Venezuelan house of cards has begun to collapse.
The black market exchange rate between the bolivar (VEF) and the U.S.
dollar (USD) tells the tale. Indeed, the bolivar has lost 64.5% of its value on
the black market since Chavez’s death.
This, in turn, has brought about very high inflation in Venezuela. At
present, the implied annual inflation rate is actually in the triple digits,
coming in at a whopping 297%.
This rate is over five times higher than the most recent official annual
inflation rate of 54% reported by the government and echoed by the
international financial press. Indeed, as I read today’s Financial Times (9 December 2013), the figure
“54%” stares me in the face. Why? The answer is straightforward: the Venezuelan
censors are effective. Perhaps not as effective as the Chinese censors. But,
effective nevertheless. The Caracas-based reporters I speak to regularly tell
me that the news organizations actually do most of the work themselves — self
censorship — to avoid having their reporters in Caracas being given the boot.
The government has responded to its economic woes by imposing ever-tougher
price controls to artificially suppress inflation. But, these policies are
nothing new. For years, the government has set the price for a number of goods.
For example, premium gasoline is fixed at only 5.8 U.S. cents per gallon —
that’s cheaper than a gallon of potable water in Caracas.
While these controls ostensibly keep prices on
official markets low, they have ultimately led to empty
shelves. Indeed, as the accompanying chart shows, approximately 22.4% of goods
are simply not available in Venezuelan stores. This index should remind
everyone of the Paul McCartney classic, “Back in the USSR.”
In addition to scarcity, price controls can lead to unintended political
consequences down the road. For example, once price controls are implemented,
it is very difficult to remove them without generating popular unrest — just
consider the 1989 riots in Venezuela when President Carlos Perez attempted to
remove price controls.
Recently, in a panicked, misguided response to the country’s economic
problems, Maduro sought, and was granted, emergency powers over the economy.
His first move was to set a cap on corporate profits, although this is somewhat
of a diversionary tactic, since inflation eats away at corporate profits and
return on investment.
Don’t be fooled by the “high” nominal returns which have been generated on
the Caracas Stock Exchange since Maduro’s inauguration. It is the real,
inflation-adjusted returns that matter — and real returns have tanked over the
past year.
Maduro has also taken aim at the auto industry, signing a decree to regulate car production “from the factory door to the place of sale”. In consequence, the government has begun to fix prices for cars and crack down on those who sell at market prices. It will be interesting to see who Maduro blames when this results in a shortage of new cars.
Maduro has also taken aim at the auto industry, signing a decree to regulate car production “from the factory door to the place of sale”. In consequence, the government has begun to fix prices for cars and crack down on those who sell at market prices. It will be interesting to see who Maduro blames when this results in a shortage of new cars.
This choice between “fair” prices and arrest is now the norm for business
owners in Venezuela. The most outrageous instance of this took place in early
November, when government security forces occupied local electronics stores and
began handing out TVs and other wares at “fair” (read: rock-bottom) prices.
Hebert Garcia, head of the High Commission for the People’s Defense of the
Economy, put it bluntly: “We have to guarantee that everybody has a plasma
television and the latest-generation fridge.”
Not surprisingly, the masses lined up around the block for their piece of
the government’s action. Too bad the government has failed to provide enough
electricity to power the plunder. In most countries, this would be called
government theft. But, under Maduro’s reign of Marxism, this redistribution has
become business as usual.
Despite frequent references to the late Hugo Chavez’s “Bolivarian”
revolution, the Maduro playbook is nothing more than a rehashing of Marx and
Engels’ ten-point plan. This was laid out in the Communist Manifesto —
a crystal-clear road map of where they wanted to take their adherents. Once you
reflect on the Manifesto’s ten-point plan, you
realize that Maduro (and many other politicians elsewhere) aren’t very
original.
1. Abolition of property in land and application of all rents of land to public purposes.
2. A heavy progressive or graduated income tax.
3. Abolition of all right of inheritance.
4. Confiscation of the property of all emigrants and rebels.
5. entralization of credit in the hands of the state, by means of a national bank with state capital and an exclusive monopoly.
6. Centralization of the means of communication and transport in the hands of the state.
7. Extension of factories and instruments of production owned by the state; the bringing into cultivation of waste lands, and the improvement of the soil generally in accordance with a common plan.
8. Equal obligation of all to work. Establishment of industrial armies, especially for agriculture.
9. Combination of agriculture with manufacturing industries; gradual abolition of the distinction between town and country, by a more equable distribution of the population over the country.
10. Free education for all children in public schools. Abolition of child factory labor in its present form. Combination of education with industrial production, etc.
The results of these Manifesto-like
policies are clear. The World Bank ranked Venezuela a dismal 181 out of 189 in
its 2014 “Doing Business” rankings. This puts Venezuela well behind such war-torn nations as Syria, Iraq, and
Afghanistan.
While Maduro may think of himself as modern-day Robin Hood, he has a lot
more in common with Edward John Smith, captain of the RMS Titanic. That said,
the economic misery created by adherence to the Communist
Manifesto can take a long time to sink a ship (think USSR).
If you have doubts, just reflect on the continued popular support for the
Maduro regime. On the first weekend of December, Venezuela held elections for
337 mayoral contests, and Maduro’s ruling socialist party (PSUV) trounced the
opposition. Maduro came away from these victories stating that his “economic
offensive” against private businesses would continue and that “We’re going in
with guns blazing, so watch out.”
Sadly, even with triple digit inflation, Maduro may be right. After all,
Slobodan Milosevic in Yugoslavia embraced the Manifesto, and it
resulted in hyperinflation — which peaked at 313,000,000% per month in January
1994. And Slobo held on until 2000. Then there is Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe.
He’s been around for 33 years, even though his adherence to the Manifesto’s mandates generated the second highest
hyperinflation in the world — peaking at 98% per day in
November 2008.
So, don’t hold your breath waiting for an uprising in Venezuela because of
high inflation and economic misery. Short of $50 per barrel oil, the Titanic
called Venezuela might stay afloat for longer than you think, before it
inevitably sinks.
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