Mostrando postagens classificadas por relevância para a consulta venezuela. Ordenar por data Mostrar todas as postagens
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quinta-feira, 18 de maio de 2017

Venezuela: a construção do desastre - José Nino (Mises)

Home | Blog | Venezuela Before Chavez: A Prelude to Socialist Failure
Venezuela Before Chavez: A Prelude to Socialist Failure
05/04/2017José Niño
This is Part One of a two-part series. Part Two is here.

Venezuela’s current economic catastrophe is well documented. Conventional narratives point to Hugo Chávez’s regime as the primary architect behind Venezuela’s economic tragedy. While Chávez and his successor Nicolás Maduro deserve the brunt of the blame for Venezuela’s current economic calamity, the underlying flaws of Venezuela’s political economy point to much more systemic problems.
Observers must look beyond stage one, and understand Venezuela’s overall history over the past 50 years in order to get a more thorough understanding of how the country has currently fallen to such lows.

Socialism Before Chávez
Analysts like to point to rosier pictures of Pre-Chávez Venezuela, but what these “experts” conveniently ignore is that the seeds of Venezuela’s destruction were sowed during those “glory years.” Years of gradual economic interventionism took what was once a country bound to join the ranks of the First World to a middle-tier developing country. This steady decline eventually created an environment where a demagogue like Chávez would completely exploit for his political gain.

The Once-Prosperous Venezuela
To comprehend Venezuela’s long-term decline, one must look back at what made it so prosperous in the first place. Before the completion of its first oil field on April 15, 1914, Venezuela was essentially a Banana Republic marked by political instability. This was largely a consequence of its colonial past and the period following its independence from Spain. Despite gaining independence from Spain, Venezuela maintained many of its primitive political and economic practices, above all, its exclusionary mercantilist and regulatory policies that kept it in an impoverished state.
However, the discovery of oil in the early twentieth century completely changed the entire ballgame. The powerful agricultural aristocracy would be supplanted by an industrialist class that sought to open its oil markets to multinational exploitation and foreign investment. For the first time in its history, Venezuela had a relatively liberal, free market economy and it would reap countless benefits in the decades to come.
From the 1910s to the 1930s, the much-maligned dictator Juan Vicente Gómez helped consolidate the Venezuelan state and modernized an otherwise neocolonial backwater by allowing market actors, domestic and foreign, to freely exploit newly discovered oil deposits. Venezuela would experience substantial economic growth and quickly establish itself as one of Latin America’s most prosperous countries by the 1950s.
In the 1950s, General Marcos Pérez Jiménez would continue Gómez’s legacy. At this juncture, Venezuela was at its peak, with a fourth place ranking in terms of per capita GDP worldwide.

More Than Just Oil
While oil exploitation did play a considerable role in Venezuela’s meteoric ascent from the 1920s to 1970s, this only scratches the surface in explaining how Venezuela became so prosperous during this period. A combination of a relatively free economy, an immigration system that attracted and assimilated laborers from Italy, Portugal, and Spain, and a system of strong property rights, allowed Venezuela to experience unprecedented levels of economic development from the 1940s up until the 1970s.
As mentioned earlier, Venezuela was at the height of its prosperity during the military dictator Marcos Pérez Jiménez’s regime. Like Juan Vicente Gómez’s regime, Pérez Jiménez’s stewardship of Venezuela was characterized by heavy political repression.
Venezuela’s capitalist structure remained largely intact during Pérez Jiménez’s tenure, albeit with creeping degrees of state involvement. Pérez Jiménez did introduce some elements of crony capitalism, pharaonic public works projects, and increased state involvement in “strategic industries” like the steel industry. Nevertheless, the Pérez Jiménez regime was open to foreign investment, let the price system function normally in most sectors of the economy, and did not embark on creating a profligate welfare state.

The Road to Social Democracy
Despite the prosperity brought about by Venezuela’s booming economy in the 1950s, Marcos Pérez Jiménez’s government drew the ire of many left-leaning activists due its heavy-handed measures. The tipping point came in 1958, when these leftist activists, working in tandem with a sympathetic military, successfully overthrew Pérez Jiménez in a coup. Pérez Jiménez would live the rest of his life in exile and would be a figure of derision among Venezuelan intellectual and political elites, despite the unprecedented economic and social development under his watch.
Following the 1958 coup, naval officer Wolfgang Larrázabal occupied the presidency briefly until general elections were held later that year. Notable social democrat political leader Rómulo Betancourt would come out on top in these elections and assume the presidency from 1959 to 1964. The Fourth Republic of Venezuela — Venezuela’s longest lasting period of democratic rule, was established under Betancourt’s administration. In 1961, a constitution was introduced, dividing the government into 3 branches — executive, legislative, and judicial — and establishing an activist role for the Venezuelan state in economic affairs.
This political order was further consolidated by the establishment of the Punto Fijo Pact. The Punto Fijo Pact consisted of a bipartisan agreement between two political parties — Acción Democratica (Democratic Action) and COPEI (Christian Democrats) — that laid the foundation for a social democratic political order and alternation of power between the two parties.
What seemed like a genuine move toward democratic stability, Venezuela’s Fourth Republic marked the beginning of a process of creeping socialism that gradually whittled away at Venezuela’s economic and institutional foundations.

The Socialist Origins of Venezuela’s Pro-Democracy Advocates
Venezuela’s current collapse did not happen overnight. It was part of a drawn out process of economic and institutional decay that began decades before.
When Venezuela returned to democracy in 1958, it looked like it was poised to begin an era of unprecedented prosperity and political stability.
However, Venezuela’s democratic experiment was doomed from the start, and one needn’t look any further at the political background of its very own founder, Rómulo Betancourt, to understand why it’s entire political system was built on a house of cards.
Rómulo Betancourt was an ex-communist who renounced his Marxist ways in favor of a more gradualist approach of establishing socialism. Despite evolving into more of a social democrat, Betancourt still believed in a very activist role for the State in economic matters.
Betancourt was part of a generation of intellectuals and student activists that aimed to fully nationalize Venezuela’s petroleum sector and use petroleum rents to establish a welfare state of sorts. These political figures firmly believed that for Venezuela to become a truly independent country and free itself from the influence of foreign interests, the government must have complete dominion over the oil sector.
Under this premise, a nationalized oil industry would finance cheap gasoline, “free” education at all levels, healthcare, and a wide array of other public services.
This rhetoric strongly resonated among the lower and middle classes, which would form the bulwark of Betancourt’s party, Acción Democrática, voter base for years to come.
At its core, this vision of economic organization assumed that the government must manage the economy through central planning. Oil would be produced, managed, and administered by the state, while the government would try to phase out the private sector.
Interventionism from the Start
Betancourt’s administration, while not as interventionist as succeeding 4th Republic governments, capped off several worrisome policies, which included:
  1. Devaluation of the Venezuelan currency, the Bolívar.
  2. Failed land reform that encouraged squatting and undermined the property rights of landowners.
  3. The establishment of a Constitutional order based on positive rights and an active role for the Venezuelan state in economic affairs
Betancourt’s government followed-up with considerable tax hikes that saw income tax rates triple to 36%. In typical fashion, spending increases would be accompanied with these increases, as the Venezuelan government started to generate fiscal deficits because of its out of control social programs. These growing deficits would become a fixture in Venezuelan public finance during the pre-Chávez era.

The Nationalization of the Oil Industry
While Betancourt did not achieve his end goal of nationalizing the Venezuelan oil industry, his government laid the foundation for subsequent interventions in that sector.
Thanks to the large oil boom of the 1970s, the government of Carlos Andrés Pérez capitalized on the unprecedented flow of petroleum rents brought about by the 1970s energy crisis where oil-producing countries like Venezuela benefited handsomely from high oil prices.
Betancourt’s vision was finally achieved in 1975, when Carlos Andrés Pérez’s government nationalized the petroleum sector. The nationalization of Venezuela’s oil industry fundamentally altered the nature of the Venezuelan state. Venezuela morphed into a petrostate, in which the concept of the consent of the governed was effectively turned on its head.
Instead of Venezuelans paying taxes to the government in exchange for the protection of property and similar freedoms, the Venezuelan state would play a patrimonial role by bribing its citizens with all sorts of handouts to maintain its dominion over them. 
On the other hand, countries based on more liberal frameworks of governance have citizens paying taxes, and in return, these governments provide services that nominally protect the life, liberty, and property of its citizens. The state is not the owner, thus giving the citizens a strong check against the Leviathan should the government overstep its boundaries.

Oil Nationalization: A Pig Trough for Politicians
Pérez would take advantage of this state power-grab to finance a profligate welfare state and a cornucopia of social welfare programs that resonated strongly with the populace. As a result, deficit spending became embraced by the political class and increasing levels of foreign and public debt would become the norm in Venezuelan fiscal affairs.
At this juncture, Venezuela’s economy became overwhelmingly politicized. Oil boom periods were characterized by an inflow of petrodollars that the state used for pharaonic public works and social projects as a means to pacify the populace.
In reality, no real wealth creation took place during these boom periods, as the state redistributed the rents according to political whims and usurped functions traditionally held by civil society and private economic actors. When politicians and bureaucrats oversee businesses, decision-making is based on partisan and state interests rather than efficiency and consumer preferences.
Although the nationalization of the petroleum industry did not result in an immediate economic downturn, it laid the groundwork for institutional decay that would clearly manifest itself during the 80s and 90s.

Venezuela: Forty Years of Economic Decline
This is Part Two of a two-part series. Part One is here.

The brunt of the blame for Venezuela’s current economic catastrophe should fall on Hugo Chávez and his successor Nicolás Maduro. However, this does not mean that all was well in Venezuela before Chávez arrived on the scene. The ideological and institutional seeds of the current crises were sown decades earlier. A rising tide of government interventions in the marketplace during the 1960s and 1970s would soon lead to a host of new problems for Venezuela.

The Oil Boom Party Ends
The 1970s looked like a never-ending boom period for Venezuela thanks to high oil prices. The then-President Carlos Andrés Pérez took full advantage of this boom to implement his lavish social spending program. Eventually, the boom period came to a crashing halt by the early 80s, and Venezuela had to face a harsh economic downturn.
Luis Herrera Campins would succeed Carlos Andrés Pérez’s government. From the start, he came to the realization that Pérez’s spending bonanza was unsustainable. In fact, Herrera had choice words for Pérez's policies, claiming that Pérez left him a "mortgaged" country.
Although Herrera was correct in his assessment of the Pérez administration’s fiscal irresponsibility, he would ironically continue more of the same cronyist policies as his predecessor. The chickens eventually came to roost as Venezuela experienced its very own “Black Friday.”
What once was one of the world’s most stable currencies, the Bolívar, experienced it’s most significant devaluation to date. Unfortunately, Herrera’s administration responded with heavy-handed exchange controls to stem capital flight. These controls would be administered by an agency called the “Differential Exchange Rate Regime” (RECADI), effectively creating a multi-tiered system of exchange rates.
Considerable corruption scandals emerged during the succeeding government of Jaime Lusinchi, as countless members of the political class would exploit the multi-tiered exchange rate system for their own gain.
Despite its abolition in 1989, RECADI would serve as a precursor to the byzantine exchange rate systems that the Commission for the Administration of Currency Exchange (CADIVI) and its successor, the National Center for Foreign Commerce (CENCOEX), would later preside over during the United Socialist Party of Venezuela’s period of dominance throughout the 2000s.
All in all, Venezuela’s Black Friday devaluation marked the beginning of a lost decade of sorts for Venezuela throughout the 1980s that set the stage for subsequent devaluations, currency controls, and irresponsible fiscal policy further down the line.

IMF to the Rescue?
Rising poverty rates, increased foreign and public debt, corrupt state enterprises, and burdensome regulations contributed to an environment of growing social tension and economic malaise throughout the 1980s. Venezuela’s previous growth miracle became an afterthought at this point. And it’s golden goose, oil, could not bail it out thanks to the low oil prices of the 1980s.
For Venezuela to right its ship, it would have to undergo painful fiscal reforms.
Ironically, it was Carlos Andrés Pérez that was entrusted with reigning in the excessive government largesse; the very same leader that established Venezuela’s profligate welfare state and laid the foundations for its collapse in the 1980s.
In 1988, Pérez campaigned on a platform that promised to bring back the splendor and prosperity of the 1970s. But once he assumed the presidency, Pérez realized that the Venezuela before him was on the verge of bankruptcy and crippled by excessive state intervention in the economy.
Under the auspices of the IMF, Pérez made a half-hearted attempt in reforming Venezuela’s broken petrostate. When broken down and analyzed, these reforms consisted of tariff reductions, tax hikes, flawed privatizations, and marginal spending cuts that ultimately did not address the underlying problems with the Venezuelan political economy — its flawed monetary policy, burdensome regulatory framework, and entrenched crony capitalist policies.
However, these reforms were too much for Pérez’s very own party, Acción Democrática (AD). AD was incensed by these reforms that hacked away at certain facets of the cronyist petrostate that it depended on to maintain its political power.
Of note, the phasing out of gas subsidies by the Pérez government — a popular social program that artificially kept gas prices low for the impoverished sectors of Venezuelan society — was used by the AD to channel discontent among the general populace.

Enter Hugo Chávez
Countless individuals would then take to the streets and protest the so-called “austerity” policies of the Pérez government. This eventually led to the infamous “Caracazo” incident in 1989, where the capital city of Caracas was engulfed in a series of protests, lootings, and riots. The government responded in a heavy-handed manner, leaving hundreds dead.
In the midst of the political chaos, radical groups took advantage of Venezuela’s political turmoil to advance their agenda. One of the most famous was then Lieutenant Colonel Hugo Chávez´s group, Revolutionary Bolivarian Movement-200 (MBR-200).
Chávez took advantage of the political disarray by consolidating an anti-government movement within the ranks of the Venezuelan military. This culminated in the failed coup attempts of 1992.
Even though Chávez was imprisoned for his coup attempt, Chavez’s agitation was enough to put the whole bipartisan Punto Fijo model into question. Eventually, corruption scandals and rising degrees of social unrest would whittle away at the Pérez administration’s legitimacy. The final nail in the coffin came when Pérez was impeached for corruption charges in 1992, thus putting the Punto Fjio model on the ropes.

Collapse of the Punto Fijo Model
Two coup attempts and the impeachment of Carl Andrés Pérez, marked the beginning of a tumultuous 1990s for Venezuela. The Venezuela of the 50s to 70s — characterized by its unprecedented economic prosperity and political stability — was starting to become a distant memory.
By 1994, the Punto Fijo model was in shambles as Rafael Caldera assumed the presidency under a new coalition, Convergencia (Convergence), of disaffected political parties.
Policywise, Rafael Caldera did not rock the boat. He pursued several of the IMF’s half measures, while not addressing structural problems such as the privatization of the oil industry, Venezuela’s downward spiraling monetary policy, and big business’s cozy relationship with the state. In addition, Caldera pardoned Hugo Chávez in 1994, rehabilitating him politically.
Thanks to the failed land reforms and housing subsidization polices pursued by the two major social democrat parties (AD and COPEI) during previous decades, major metropolitan areas like Caracas, Maracaibo, Maracay, and Valencia began to be populated by a growing subsect of impoverished Venezuelans. Chávez would tap into this low stratum of Venezuelan society and effectively turn them into shock troops for his campaign to radically transform Venezuela into a full-blown socialist state.

The Failure of the Social Democratic Era
It is undeniable that Venezuela’s social democratic consensus delivered sub-optimal results. From 1958 to 1998, Venezuela’s per capita GDP growth was a paltry -0.13 % indicating that the Venezuelan populace grew faster than the wealth produced in that time frame. In his book, Introduction to Economic Growth, Charles I. Jones classified the Venezuelan case as an example of a “growth disaster.” Venezuela was one of two countries in Latin America that suffered negative growth during this 40-year period, the other being Nicaragua, a country that suffered a costly civil war and was under the rule of a socialist government.
Chávez capitalized on this stagnation by launching a campaign against the bipartisan political consensus that ruled Venezuela at the time. Branding himself as a “Third Way” candidate, Chávez sought to provide an alternative to the perceived corruption of the Punto Fijo political order.
Despite the rosy rhetoric, Chávez was surrounding himself with hardened Marxists and other collectivist figures that were hell-bent on subverting Venezuela’s already fragile political order. Little did the disillusioned voters that cast a ballot for Chávez know what they were about to get themselves into.
Chavismo: Interventionism on Steroids
While Chávez may have been correct in pointing out the corruption of the old Punto Fijo order, he would ironically continue many of its failed policies throughout his regime, amplifying their disastrous effects and implementing them in a tyrannical fashion.
Currency controls, expropriations, price controls, and the use of the state-owned oil company, PDVSA, to finance lavish social spending programs were fixtures of Hugo Chávez’s socialist economic policy.
In addition, Venezuelan political institutions were completely eviscerated, media outlets were suppressed, and political activists were subject to numerous human rights violations under Chávez’s heavy-handed rule.
Chávez had the luxury of high oil prices from 2003 to 2010 to finance his socialist schemes and channel the petroleum rents to consolidate political support in the short term. But once oil prices plummeted, the laws of economics reared their ugly head and the system began to unravel in no time.
Even with Chávez’s death in 2013, his brand of tyrannical socialism has continued unabated under the rule of his successor, Nicolás Maduro.
The Venezuela that stands before us is a failed state. In an atavistic sense, Venezuela has returned to its 19th century state as an increasingly fragmented, political backwater.
Time will tell if the Venezuelan nation will continue to exist as a cohesive whole, or if certain sectors of Venezuelan society decide to blaze their own trail and start to break up the country.

Lessons Learned
If Venezuelans want to restore Venezuela to its once prosperous state, they must look back and understand the genesis of Venezuela’s current crisis.
It is myopic to pit the blame solely on demagogues and believe that things will be perfectly fine once the “right people” are put in charge. Political events like the rise of Hugo Chávez do not occur in a vacuum. Astute observers of political economy must analyze the overarching institutions and policies that create the type of political environment that enables authoritarians like Hugo Chávez to come into power.
The Venezuelan case serves as a strong warning to many a European country with crumbling welfare states and growing social discontent. Sooner or later, unsustainable transfer systems are bound to collapse and social disorder ensues.
Left unchecked, socialism only creates a vicious cycle of interventionism that leads to more chaos and misery. To reach the light at the end of the tunnel, Venezuela must completely abandon socialism and embrace the capitalist path to prosperity.

sexta-feira, 29 de novembro de 2024

Venezuela: a maneira dura de Trump tratar com a ditadura não vai funcionar, como não funcionou com Cuba ou Nicarágua - Francisco Rodriguez (Foreign Affairs)

 The Case for Engagement With Venezuela

Maximum Pressure Will Only Strengthen Maduro

By Francisco Rodríguez

Foreign Affairs, November 28, 2024

https://www.foreignaffairs.com/venezuela/case-engagement-venezuela?utm_medium=newsletters&utm_source=fatoday&utm_campaign=The%20Case%20for%20Engagement%20With%20Venezuela&utm_content=20241128&utm_term=EDZZZ003ZX#author-info

 

Among the most complex foreign policy challenges facing the new U.S. administration is the situation in Venezuela. Over the past 12 years, Venezuela has transitioned from a fragile democracy to an entrenched authoritarian regime, experiencing one of the most severe economic collapses and migration crises in modern history outside wartime. And in recent years, these problems have increasingly affected the United States. During the past five years, U.S. authorities have apprehended more than 900,000 Venezuelans attempting to cross the southern border.

[Lea la versión de este artículo en español aquí.]

Many expect that Donald Trump’s presidency will mean the return of the maximum-pressure approach to Venezuela that defined his first term, when Washington imposed sweeping oil and financial sanctions, backed efforts at an armed uprising, and even floated the possibility of direct military action. At a rally in Florida just three days before the election, Senator Marco Rubio, Trump’s nominee for secretary of state, asserted that under the new administration, “we will have a very different position, much tougher and much clearer, not only in Venezuela, but also in Cuba and Nicaragua.” Rubio has cosponsored legislation to codify sanctions on Venezuela, conditioning any sanctions relief and diplomatic recognition on Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro relinquishing power and an opposition-led transition.

But a return to the failed strategy of maximum pressure by the new administration would be a grave mistake. Sanctions are rarely effective in achieving regime change, and Venezuela is no exception. Far from destabilizing Maduro, U.S. sanctions have helped him consolidate control, increasing the asymmetry of power between the state’s apparatus and an impoverished and weakened civil society. More than seven million Venezuelans have fled the country since 2014, and doubling down on pressure could further worsen the living conditions of those remaining. Maximum pressure will, therefore, cut against Washington’s effort to reduce irregular migration and ensure a stable energy supply.

The United States should continue to condemn Maduro’s authoritarian government for its human rights violations and dismantling of democratic institutions. But Trump and his administration should adopt a strategy of targeted engagement with Venezuela’s authorities. Such a strategy would prioritize maintaining or strengthening economic and diplomatic linkages between the United States and Venezuela—the types of connections that can empower stakeholders committed to fostering a democratic transition. The first priority of U.S. policy should be to alleviate the suffering of Venezuelans, recognizing that broad economic sanctions have exacerbated that suffering. Where possible, Washington should leverage engagement—including the gradual easing of sanctions—to encourage improvements in human rights and political freedoms. This strategy of targeted engagement offers a path to immediately improve conditions in Venezuela while enhancing the prospects for a democratic transition in the medium to long term.

SANCTIONING CATASTROPHE

From 2017 to 2022, the United States imposed some of the harshest sanctions on Venezuela that it has levied on any country. The Trump administration halted all trade with Venezuela’s state-owned oil, gold, and banking sectors (transactions with private banks were still allowed) and blocked the national government and the oil industry from borrowing, restructuring debt, or receiving dividends from its offshore subsidiaries (like Citgo). In 2019, Washington handed control over Venezuela’s overseas assets to the U.S.-recognized opposition, led by Juan Guaidó, and blocked the country’s access to international reserve holdings, including special drawing rights in the International Monetary Fund.

The first Trump administration also imposed secondary sanctions, barring Venezuela from selling oil abroad by targeting foreign companies and vessels involved in its oil trade. Between 2019 and 2021, 47 vessels and 12 companies were sanctioned for assisting in Venezuelan oil exports. (In contrast, despite similar U.S. sanctions on Russian oil today, non-U.S. tankers can still sell Russian oil at $60 per barrel without being sanctioned themselves.)

This pressure has compounded Venezuela’s economic crisis. The country’s contraction in per capita incomes began in 2013 because of severe macroeconomic imbalances created by years of populist policies. Yet starting in 2017, sanctions significantly worsened the economy by severing Venezuela’s access to vital oil and financial markets, which led to a sharp decline in oil production. Sanctions contributed substantially to falling oil output, imports, and productivity; without them, Venezuela’s economy would have started to recover when oil prices rose in 2017. Sanctions accounted for around 52 percent of Venezuela’s economic contraction between 2012 and 2020. Without sanctions, Venezuela would have still faced a severe crisis, with per capita incomes dropping by 34 percent. With sanctions, however, GDP per capita declined by an extraordinary 71 percent—equivalent to almost three successive Great Depressions.

Venezuela’s migration crisis stems from this collapse in economic opportunities. Although the country’s human rights violations are horrific, they are not on the scale of the ethnic cleansing, genocide, or armed conflict that typically drives mass displacement. Instead, millions of Venezuelans have left to escape an economic catastrophe. If the U.S. government resumes policies that target Venezuelans’ livelihoods, it should not be surprised when many of those affected end up at its doorstep.

GAINING FROM ENGAGEMENT

In 2022, the Biden administration reestablished contact with the Maduro government, pursuing a dual track that gradually eased sanctions and encouraged renewed negotiations with the opposition. In November of that year, the U.S. Treasury issued a license for Chevron—the only U.S. oil company with production capacity in Venezuela—to export Venezuelan oil to the United States, coinciding with the resumption of talks between the Maduro government and its opposition.

Critics claimed that the Biden administration was giving Maduro sanctions relief without gaining anything in return. Yet this critique overlooks a key achievement. In October 2023, Maduro publicly committed to holding free and fair presidential elections. Though the election ended up being minimally transparent, this concession ultimately allowed the opposition coalition to register Edmundo González as a candidate after María Corina Machado, who had won the opposition’s primary in October 2023, was barred from running. Washington also successfully encouraged the opposition to abandon its failed electoral boycotts and to engage in the election process despite facing an unlevel playing field.

These decisions helped pave the way for González to defeat Maduro in the July 28 presidential election by more than a two-to-one margin. The opposition documented its victory with tally sheets from the country’s electronic voting system, reenergizing the coalition and demonstrating its broad support among Venezuelans. Although this victory did not produce immediate change, with Maduro’s electoral council blatantly altering the election’s results to declare Maduro the winner, it marked the opposition’s strongest challenge yet to Maduro’s authoritarian rule.

Critics might argue that the opposition’s electoral victory was meaningless because Maduro ultimately retained power and intensified repression. But such a critique misses the broader significance of the outcome. The elections played a crucial role in revitalizing and legitimizing Venezuela’s opposition, demonstrating its broad popular support, and strengthening its internal cohesion. These developments are essential preconditions for any successful challenge to an entrenched regime. Whether these gains can translate into meaningful change will depend on how realistic the opposition’s objectives are and how well it leverages its newfound strength in future negotiations.

BEYOND ISOLATION

A realistic foreign policy toward Venezuela must begin with the recognition that Washington has limited influence over political dynamics in authoritarian countries. In a world where 71 percent of people live under autocratic regimes, it is not only futile but also dangerous to target select countries—such as Cuba, Iran, and Venezuela—for regime change. Singling out specific regimes risks alienating allies, undermining U.S. moral authority, and reinforcing authoritarians’ claims that Washington meddles in other countries’ domestic affairs. In Venezuela, a principled, pragmatic approach—focused on humanitarian relief and diplomatic engagement—would better serve the interests of both the United States and the Venezuelan people.

Trump’s administration should thus continue easing economic sanctions. It should do so, in part, simply because the restrictions have needlessly immiserated millions. But improving the country’s living conditions also serves a political purpose. The more tolerable life becomes for Venezuelans, the less likely they are to flee to the United States. Managing migration flows from Venezuela will also require sustained communication and coordination with Caracas. Reopening the U.S. embassy in Venezuela is therefore a critical step to safeguarding American interests in the country, as well.

A return to the failed strategy of maximum pressure would be a grave mistake.

Easing sanctions could afford the Trump administration an opportunity to secure concessions on human rights. Licenses for new oil projects, for example, could be conditioned on revenues being allocated to international organizations that can address Venezuela’s humanitarian crisis. Likewise, the Trump administration could use sanctions relief to induce political reforms. It should work to secure the release of political prisoners. It should negotiate for institutional changes that reduce the stakes of power and create space for coexistence between Venezuela’s political factions. It should push Venezuela to appoint new electoral authorities and commit to inviting in international observers for upcoming elections. All three of these steps would provide vital space for electoral competition. They remain the best path to fostering a democratic transition. (The United States should also work with regional partners, including Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico, to forge a realistic political settlement.)

Should the Trump administration embrace a policy of limited engagement, it would be bowing to reality. Punitive policies may appeal to policymakers, but they often corner regimes, making behavioral change unlikely. A government whose leaders fear U.S. prosecution will do everything to remain in power, including stealing elections. Strategic engagement, on the other hand, can incentivize positive shifts and strengthen local actors who support a negotiated resolution. The political scientists Steven Levitsky and Lucan Way have shown that countries with economic, social, and institutional ties to the West are more likely to democratize than those subjected solely to punitive measures.

Likewise, Trump would be accepting that when people become poorer in an authoritarian country, the state becomes stronger, not weaker. At the height of the Venezuelan economy’s contraction, a large segment of the population depended on politically conditioned government handouts. In contrast, Venezuela’s economic recovery of the past four years, due in part to the easing of oil sanctions, has helped reduce low-income voters’ dependency on government programs, making them less susceptible to electoral blackmail.

No U.S. administration can overhaul Venezuela’s political system. But by setting achievable goals that address immediate needs, promote economic recovery, and support fundamental freedoms, the United States can help the Venezuelan people. A pragmatic approach that prioritizes economic recovery and gradual political progress will be far more effective in bringing Venezuela closer to change than a strategy of suffocation.

 

  • FRANCISCO RODRÍGUEZ is Rice Family Professor of the Practice of International and Public Affairs at the University of Denver’s Josef Korbel School of International Studies.

sexta-feira, 20 de março de 2015

Brasil-Venezuela: negocios entre companheiros, com ganhos arriscados... - BBC

Los suculentos negocios que atan a Brasil con Venezuela
BBC News, 18/03/2015

Brasil nunca ocultó que veía en la Venezuela socialista de Hugo Chávez un mercado atractivo para sus empresas.
“La presencia de Venezuela en el Mercosur (…) abre oportunidades a varios emprendimientos”, dijo la presidenta brasileña, Dilma Rousseff, cuando dio la bienvenida al país vecino y rico en petróleo al bloque regional, en julio de 2012.
Y varios números sugieren que la apuesta brasileña rindió sus frutos.
Sólo el año pasado, el gigante sudamericano tuvo en su intercambio comercial con Venezuela un superávit de US$3.450 millones.
Para Brasil ese saldo positivo fue a contramano de su balanza comercial total, que el mismo 2014 registró su primer déficit anual en lo que va de este siglo.
Expertos como Oliver Stuenkel, profesor de relaciones internacionales en la Fundación Getulio Vargas, con sede en São Paulo, calculan que las empresas brasileñas tienen contratos en Venezuela por unos US$20 mil millones.
“Brasil obtuvo muchos beneficios económicos (en Venezuela) a lo largo de los últimos 15 años y el chavismo era un socio comercial confiable. Chávez y (su sucesor Nicolás) Maduro dieron preferencia a las inversiones brasileñas”, indicó Stuenkel a BBC Mundo.
Pero esa relación enfrenta desafíos inéditos ahora que Venezuela pasa crecientes problemas económicos, tensiones políticas y surgen reclamos de una actitud más firme de Brasil ante el gobierno “amigo”.
“Cuestión interna”
Hasta ahora la administración de Rousseff evitó criticar directa y públicamente a Maduro, lo que contrasta con la actitud de Estados Unidos, otro actor clave en el hemisferio y socio comercial importante de Caracas.
El presidente estadounidense, Barack Obama, declaró a Venezuela una amenaza para la seguridad nacional y ordenó sanciones contra siete altos funcionarios de ese país.
En cambio, Brasil ha medido sus palabras sobre Venezuela desde el arresto el mes pasado del alcalde de Caracas, el opositor Antonio Ledezma, acusado por el gobierno de Maduro de participar de un supuesto plan para derrocarlo.
La Cancillería brasileña primero señaló que acompañaba “con gran preocupación la evolución de la situación en Venezuela”. Pero la propia Rousseff calificó el arresto de Ledezma como una “cuestión interna” de ese país.
Unos días después, Itamaraty emitió otro comunicado sobre Venezuela que afirmó que “son motivos de creciente atención medidas tomadas en los últimos días, que afectan directamente partidos políticos y representantes democráticamente electos”.
Al igual que lo hizo el año pasado tras las manifestaciones antigubernamentales que fueron reprimidas en Venezuela, Brasil llamó a retomar “el diálogo” en el país, a través de la Unión de Naciones Sudamericanas (Unasur) y el apoyo del Vaticano.
Grupos defensores de los derechos humanos como Human Rights Watch y Amnistía Internacional han criticado la posición de Brasil —el primero la calificó de “tímida”— ante la “prisión arbitraria” de opositores y otros abusos que afirman que se cometen en Venezuela.
Y opositores brasileños acusaron al gobierno de Rousseff de ser “cómplice” de Maduro y actuar en función de vínculos ideológicos con las autoridades vecinas.
Sin embargo, Stuenkel calificó esta visión como “simplista”.
“La cuestión económica (en Venezuela) es más importante que cualquier factor político”, sostuvo. “El comportamiento brasileño hasta hoy fue principalmente pautado por intereses económicos”.
Pero, ¿cuáles son exactamente esos intereses?
Puentes, usinas y deudas
Las empresas brasileñas tienen un abanico amplio de actividades en Venezuela: desde la colocación de alimentos y otros bienes de consumo en un mercado con serios problemas de escasez, hasta grandes obras de infraestructura.
La constructora Odebrecht, por ejemplo, tiene una docena de proyectos en Venezuela, incluida la ampliación del metro de Caracas, el tendido de un puente de 11,4 kilómetros sobre el Lago de Maracaibo (al oeste del país) y el desarrollo de la central hidroeléctrica Tocoma (al este).
Por otra parte, la lista de productos brasileños exportados a Venezuela es extensa: las carnes bovinas tienen un peso destacado, pero también hay leche, azúcar, medicamentos, maquinarias, champú, afeitadoras…
El propio gobierno brasileño ha buscado empresas brasileñas que abastezcan productos básicos a Venezuela para aliviar la crisis, tras al menos dos pedidos personales de Maduro a Rousseff, informó el diario Folha de S.Paulo el martes.
No obstante, las dificultades de los importadores venezolanos para obtener dólares ha provocado importantes atrasos de pagos a los exportadores brasileños, mientras que empresas brasileñas instaladas en el país vecino también tuvieron problemas para enviar fondos a la matriz.
La Cámara de Comercio Venezuela-Brasil calculaba a comienzos de año que esos atrasos sumaban US$5.000 millones. Pero un funcionario venezolano que habló en condición de anonimato por tratarse de un tema sensible dijo a BBC Mundo que la cifra podría llegar al doble.
Welber Barral, exsecretario brasileño de Comercio Exterior y socio de la consultora Barral M Jorge, señaló que los atrasos varían según del ramo del exportador y que a clientes suyos del área de los alimentos “les están pagando”.
Sin embargo, indicó que los atrasos que hubo en general y los problemas de liquidez que causó a Venezuela el desplome del precio del petróleo provocaron una reciente contracción del comercio bilateral.
Las exportaciones brasileñas a Venezuela cayeron 47% en los dos primeros meses de este año respecto al mismo período de 2014, mientras el superávit del intercambio se redujo 53%.
La situación parece preocupar al gobierno de Rousseff, que estudió plantearle a Venezuela que las exportaciones brasileñas tengan como garantía el petróleo de la estatal PDVSA o sus derivados, para "desmonetizar" el comercio, informó el diario brasileño Valor Económico a fines de enero.
Pero Barral dijo a BBC Mundo que eso sería insuficiente, ya que Brasil produce el mismo tipo de petróleo que su vecino. “Brasil no tiene qué importar” de Venezuela, resumió.
Con crecientes dificultades políticas y económicas también en Brasil —que incluyen un creciente descontento social doméstico, una devaluación de más de 20% del real ante el dólar este año y una inflación a 12 meses que en febrero llegó al máximo en una década— muchos creen que lo último que quiere Rousseff es más inestabilidad en Venezuela.
“No se puede decir que el impacto de un colapso venezolano afectaría apenas algunos sectores de la economía brasileña”, dijo Stuenkel. “En la situación actual, con tantas noticias negativas, sería otro factor que afectaría de manera muy negativa el cuadro”.

segunda-feira, 2 de janeiro de 2012

Aventuras economicas de Mister Chavez (acabam saindo caras para Venezuela)


Venezuela tendrá que pagar a Exxon 908 millones de dólares

Exxon-Ven
Reuters
Caracas, 1 de enero de 2012
Las claves
  • Fuentes del Gobierno de Venezuela consideraron "favorable" el veredicto.
  • Las petroleras Exxon y ConocoPhillips introdujeron arbitrajes contra Venezuela en el 2007 solicitando más de 40.000 millones de dólares en compensación, pero Venezuela dijo que estimaba pagar no más de 2.500 millones de dólares por ambos casos.
Exxon Mobil dijo el domingo que un panel de arbitraje internacional le concedió unos 908 millones de dólares en el litigio que mantiene con Venezuela por la nacionalización de sus activos en el país, cifra inferior a lo solicitado inicialmente por la firma estadounidense.
El veredicto de la Cámara de Comercio Internacional(ICC por su sigla en inglés) fue conocido el sábado y fuentes del Gobierno de Venezuela dijeron a Reuters que lo consideraban “favorable” para el país de la OPEP, pero no hablaron de un monto.
“La decisión de la ICC confirma que (la petrolera estatal) PDVSA tiene una obligación contractual con Exxon Mobil. La decisión de la ICC es por 907,58 millones de dólares”, dijo un portavoz de la empresa mediante un correo electrónico.
Asdrúbal Oliveros, director de Ecoanalítica, comentó en la red social Twitter que “si ese es el monto definitivo, es claro que PDVSA salió ganando” y recordó que todavía están pendientes otro arbitraje conExxon en un tribunal del Banco Mundial y el caso conConocoPhillips, que es de mayor magnitud.
Las petroleras Exxon y ConocoPhillips introdujeron arbitrajes contra Venezuela en el 2007 solicitando más de 40.000 millones de dólares en compensación, pero Venezuela dijo que estimaba pagar no más de 2.500 millones de dólares por ambos casos.
“La valoración de los activos de Exxon en Venezuela estaba en el orden de 4.500 millones de dólares”, agregó Oliveros.
El portavoz de la petrolera estadounidense dijo más tarde el domingo que a la fecha no se conoce una decisión sobre el arbitraje que se sigue ante el Centro Internacional de Arreglo de Disputas Relativas a Inversiones (Ciadi), que depende del Banco Mundial.
“En cuanto al arbitraje en el Ciadi, está previsto entregar los alegatos en febrero”, explicó el ejecutivo de la petrolera.
Exxon operaba la asociación estratégica Cerro Negro para extraer y mejorar crudo extrapesado en la vasta Faja del Orinoco, así como el convenio de exploración a riesgo La Ceiba, que no había iniciado su producción.
Como parte de estos negocios, PDVSA además participa con 50 por ciento de interés en la refinería de Chalmette, en Louisiana, que es operada por Exxon, y tiene acciones en la unidad Merey Sweeney, de la refinería de Sweeney, operada por Conoco.
A diferencia del caso Conoco, la disputa entre Exxon y el Gobierno del presidente Hugo Chávez ha sido muy hostil.
En el 2008, la estadounidense obtuvo una orden cautelar de un juez británico para congelar hasta 12.000 millones de dólares en activos externos de la estatal Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), pero la corte luego desestimó el caso en espera de la resolución arbitral, que cursa en dos tribunales simultáneamente.
El ministro de Energía Rafael Ramírez dijo a Reuters este año que Venezuela esperaba un fallo de la ICC para antes de que culminara el 2011 y puntualizó que el Gobierno pagaría una compensación “justa”.
Dijo también que Venezuela estimaba pagar no más de 2.500 millones por ambos arbitrajes (Exxon y Conoco) y descartó la posibilidad de acordar un arreglo amistoso, aunque Chávez no desestimó esta opción hace algunas semanas cuando fue consultado al respecto en una rueda de prensa.
Las dos firmas estadounidenses se retiraron del país a finales de 2007 tras la ocupación de sus negocios por parte de PDVSA y de personal militar. Los obreros pasaron a la nómina de la estatal, que ahora mantiene la participación mayoritaria en todos los proyectos petroleros del país.


Venezuela enfrenta más de 20 arbitrajes internacionales

Reuters
Caracas, 1 enero 2012
Exxon Mobil dijo el domingo que un panel de arbitraje internacional le concedió unos 908 millones de dólares en la disputa que mantiene con la estatal Petróleos de Venezuela por la nacionalización de sus activos en el país, cifra inferior a lo solicitado inicialmente por la firma estadounidense.
El veredicto de la Cámara de Comercio Internacional (ICC por su sigla en inglés) fue conocido el sábado y fuentes del Gobierno de Venezuela dijeron a Reuters que lo consideraban “favorable” para el país de la OPEP, pero no hablaron de un monto .
Las masivas expropiaciones del presidente venezolano, Hugo Chávez, han desencadenado más de 20 arbitrajes ante diferentes instancias, entre los que destacan, además del caso con Exxon Mobil, otro con la también estadounidense ConocoPhillips.
A continuación una lista de los principales casos contra Venezuela aún pendientes ante el Centro Internacional de Arreglo de Disputas Relativas a Inversiones (Ciadi), que depende del Banco Mundial, sin incluir los que se ventilan en otros tribunales:
* Exxon Mobil: Se introdujo en octubre del 2007, poco después de que el Gobierno tomara los activos de la petrolera, que operaba el proyecto Cerro Negro en la Faja del Orinoco y el convenio de exploración a riesgo La Ceiba en Occidente.
A principios del 2008 Exxon sorprendió al Gobierno venezolano, al acompañar sus peticiones de arbitraje con un recurso de congelación de hasta 12.000 millones de dólares en activos externos de Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), medida que finalmente fue descartada por un tribunal británico.
Aunque Exxon aspiraba a recibir hasta 15.000 millones de dólares, en 2010 la estatal PDVSA informó que la firma había restringido su reclamo a unos 7.000 millones de dólares. Venezuela ofrecía pagar hasta 1.000 millones de dólares.
* ConocoPhillips: Es el arbitraje más oneroso que enfrenta Venezuela, con una aspiración de indemnización de 31.000 millones de dólares por la nacionalización de dos proyectos en el Orinoco y dos convenios de exploración.
En octubre el tribunal recibió una petición de descalificación de uno de los árbitros, pero en un prospecto de deuda, PDVSA dijo hace pocos meses que espera asistir a una audiencia determinante entre el 10 y el 14 de enero, lo que podría conducir a un veredicto este año.
* Cemex y Holcim: Entre 2008 y 2009, luego que la mexicana Cemex y la suiza Holcim no lograran acuerdos con Venezuela, solicitaron arbitrajes ante el Ciadi por la expropiación de la industria cementera.
Sus reclamos involucran unos 2.000 millones de dólares en conjunto. Aunque Holcim y Venezuela dijeron que llegaron a un arreglo amistoso, el caso no ha sido retirado de la Corte.
A inicios de diciembre, Venezuela dijo que pagará 600 millones de dólares a la mexicana Cemex, en un acuerdo de compensación por la nacionalización de su filial local que alcanzan las partes tres años después de que la cementera solicitara arbitraje a un tribunal internacional.
* Gold Reserve y Cristallex: En el 2009 la minera canadiense solicitó arbitraje por la revocatoria de dos proyectos auríferos. Su solicitud de compensación se elevó en agosto a 2.100 millones de dólares.
La canadiense Vanessa Ventures tiene un reclamo similar por un proyecto de más de 1.000 millones de dólares.
En enero las firmas Highbury International y Rammstein Trading introdujeron otro caso relacionado con minería y el último caso minero en ventilarse mediante arbitraje corresponde a la canadiense Crystallex, que solicita 3.800 millones de dólares por el proyecto Las Cristinas.
* Tidewater: Tras esperar por meses a que Venezuela compensara a las 76 empresas de servicios petroleros que expropió en mayo del 2009, la estadounidense Tidewater solicitó arbitraje para recuperar el valor de sus embarcaciones, estimado en unos 45 millones de dólares.
* Universal Compression Internacional Holdings: La firma, adquirida por la estadounidense Exterran, fue otra afectada por las expropiaciones del 2009. Introdujo arbitraje en el 2010 por sus activos, valorados en 400 millones de dólares. Se pidió la descalificación de uno de los árbitros.
* OPIC Karimum: Introducido en el 2010 por una filial de la estatal taiwanesa CPC Corp , que tenía una porción minoritaria en los proyectos petroleros Golfo de Paria Este y Oeste. Se discute una petición de descalificación de árbitro.
* Tenaris: Las siderúrgicas Tenaris y Talsa, controladas por el argentino Techint, solicitaron arbitraje contra Venezuela por la nacionalización en 2009 de una de sus filiales, Matesi.
Un año antes el Gobierno había estatizado la Siderúrgica del Orinoco (Sidor), en donde participaba el grupo argentino, por la que acordó pagar 2.000 millones de dólares.
* Owen Illinois: La fabricante estadounidense de envases de vidrio solicitó arbitraje en septiembre por la expropiación de sus dos plantas en Venezuela el año pasado, que representaban 5 por ciento de sus operaciones mundiales.
Poco antes la estadounidense Koch Industries introdujo un caso similar ante el Ciadi por la toma de Fertinitro, una empresa mixta para la producción de fertilizantes que compartía con la estatal Pequiven y la italiana Snamprogetti.
(Fuentes: reportes de Reuters y página web del Ciadi: www.worldbank.org/icsid)

=============
Addendum 3 Jan 2012: 


Venezuela to pay Exxon $255m in oil dispute






Venezuela has said it will pay Exxon Mobil $255m (£164m) in compensation for assets nationalised in 2007 - less than a third of what an arbitration panel awarded the oil giant.
The ruling may be a boost to President Hugo Chavez.
The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) in Paris had ruled that PDVSA, Venezuela's state oil company, was required to compensate the US firm. 
It said PDVSA should pay Exxon $908m.
But PDVSA said that debts owed by Exxon and court action meant the amount it would actually pay would be much less.
Exxon said the ICC award gave the company "$907.6m of real financial benefit in the form of debt relief and cash".
PDVSA said Exxon had previously used international courts to freeze $300m in Venezuela's US accounts, and added that Exxon owed $191m relating to the financing of an oil project in Venezuela, as well as $160m that the arbitration tribunal said was due.
Exxon had reportedly sought $10bn in compensation for the nationalisation of its heavy crude upgrading project in Venezuela's oil rich Orinoco belt.
"After four years of arbitration, the real amount determined by the ICC tribunal indeed represents less than the exorbitant sum initially demanded," PDVSA said in the statement.
The Venezuelan government said in September it had offered Exxon $1bn to settle the case.
Future cases
It is one of many arbitration cases currently under consideration after Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez ordered the nationalisation of the assets of some oil companies including Exxon and Conoco Phillips.
"They must be elated that they got off so cheap. It's certainly a happy new year for Venezuela," said Russ Dallen at Caracas Capital Markets after the ICC announced its ruling.
The decision was made by an arbitration tribunal at the ICC. Under the rules of the arbitration, its decisions are binding.
Exxon will hope for a better result in the next case concerning the nationalisation of its Cerro Negro heavy oil project, which is being heard by a different arbitration panel.
An Exxon spokesman said: "The larger ICSID (International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes) arbitration against the government of Venezuela is ongoing and is expected to be argued in February for the fair market value of the project.
"We recognise Venezuela's legal right to expropriate assets subject to compensation at fair market value."
Much of Venezuela's so far untapped reserves are harder-to-process heavy oil, and the Venezuelan government has been keen to increase state revenues from these reserves.
Analysts have said the country's aggressive nationalisation strategy may have deterred foreign investors and limited oil production.
But despite the moves, which saw Exxon and Conoco Philips leave the country, other oil firms have continued to invest.
In 2010, US firm Chevron and Spain's Repsol signed investment deals to exploit resources in the country's Orinoco belt.

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