Venezuela: Down the Road of Socialism - Wealth by Cronyism Rather than by Ability

TheDanold

Unimatrix
In the end when you go down a road of Socialism, no matter how slow or how "benevolent" the causes in social welfare programs, to sustain it a government needs to use force and corruption ensues.

"“PETROLEUM socialism” is how Hugo Chávez, Venezuela's president, recently dubbed the blend of military populism and neo-Marxist statism to which he is subjecting his country. Its prime objective, he insists, is to improve the lot of the country's poor majority. Mr Chávez proclaims that “being rich is bad”. He frequently lashes out at what he calls “the oligarchy”. Strange, then, that the streets of Caracas are clogged with big new 4x4s (Hummers are especially favoured), it is hard to get a table at the best restaurants, and art dealers and whisky importers have never had it so good. A new oligarchy seems to be rising in Venezuela on the back of the “Bolivarian Revolution”, named for the country's independence hero.

“Some of Chávez's speeches are for the gallery,” says Alberto Muller Rojas, a retired army general who was until recently the president's chief of staff. “And I'll give you an example: the attack on the bourgeoisie.” As evidence, General Muller singles out the banks: “the most extreme expression of the bourgeoisie” but “the most favoured sector” of the economy since Mr Chávez came to power in 1999.

Their prosperity owes much to an oil windfall: the price of Venezuela's main export has increased almost eightfold since 1999 and the economy has been growing at 10% a year. But government policies, too, have favoured the bankers and other intermediaries: inflation is close to 20% and the official value of the currency is twice its black-market exchange rate. So the savvy investor looks for access to cheap dollars, import opportunities and government contracts, all of which are largely conditional on political obedience. By contrast, manufacturers and farmers face price controls and risk sporadic official harassment. The result has been the rise of what is known, in obeisance to Bolívar, as the “Boli-bourgeoisie”.

Thanks to economic growth and social programmes, the government claims that only 30% of Venezuelan families now live in poverty, down from 55% at the peak in 2003. But according to a new report by the central bank, income inequality has widened slightly under Mr Chávez: the Gini coefficient—a statistical measure of inequality—has gone from 0.44 in 2000 to 0.48 in 2005.

Typical of the new “Boligarchy” is Wilmer Ruperti, a shipping broker who was once a merchant seaman. His ascent was helped by a two-month strike against Mr Chávez by workers at Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), the state oil company. Mr Ruperti chartered ships to help the government break the strike. Another is Arné Chacón, whose brother Jesse is the communications minister. Arné now owns half of Baninvest, a bank. He acquired it with loans for which his main apparent collateral was his official connections.

Mr Chávez claims to be pursuing economic nationalism and “endogenous development”. But farmers and manufacturers struggle against cheap imports. Though local dairy products are often missing from the supermarket shelves, Gouda and Emmenthal cheeses nestle beside Irish butter. The frozen chickens at Mercal, a government chain of subsidised grocery shops, are Brazilian. The importers who supply Mercal have grown rich. But Venezuela's ranchers are becoming extinct, threatened by expropriations, land invasions and price controls, as well as by extortion and kidnappings by criminal gangs.

Officials stress that two-thirds of the poor have benefited directly from government social policies. As well as Mercal, these include the “missions”, which offer education and health care. Up to 2m people get a small cash stipend. But despite hefty increases in the minimum wage and price controls on basic goods, inflation is eating away at the gains.

For those with connections, however, the rewards are great. The World Bank recently ranked Venezuela as the second-worst country in the Americas for the control of corruption, above only Haiti. Others confirm this perception. “We usually ask for 10%,” a foreign diplomat reports one government official admitting. “But some get greedy and want 15-20%.”

Since his re-election in December, Mr Chávez has frequently suggested capping the salaries of the highest-paid public officials. He also called on those with “excess” wealth to donate part of it to worthy causes. The response has been meagre. If he really tries to make socialism more than a slogan, some of the fiercest resistance may come from the new bourgeoisie his own policies have created."

http://www.economist.com/world/la/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9621513
 
Another black mark for leftism and Chavez, I wonder what blackascoal thinks of his hero now?

Also anyone ever find it strange how leftists rail on against oil and pollution, but all of a sudden when it's a Socialist (Chavez) who benefits from oil production, then he can be their fucking hero with complete disregard of the environment that leftists love to claim they are saving from capitalists.

Right now in Venezuela, gas is beyond cheap at between 10 to 20 cents a gallon, thanks to government subsidies (handouts), probably the least green policy on the planet, yet ever hear an environmentalist talk about that one?
Their agenda is a political one, NOT an environmental one. Same reason the old USSR used to get a free pass on it's destruction of the environment, by the enviro-leftist movements.
 
In the end when you go down a road of Socialism, no matter how slow or how "benevolent" the causes in social welfare programs, to sustain it a government needs to use force and corruption ensues.

Amen Brother Dan. Ultimately, redistribution of wealth only comes through threat of violence. I'm a man of peace, a man of the porcelain God, that's why I'm a libertarian (small l now, don't know if you knew that I left the party).
 
In the end when you go down a road of Socialism, no matter how slow or how "benevolent" the causes in social welfare programs, to sustain it a government needs to use force and corruption ensues.

"“PETROLEUM socialism” is how Hugo Chávez, Venezuela's president, recently dubbed the blend of military populism and neo-Marxist statism to which he is subjecting his country. Its prime objective, he insists, is to improve the lot of the country's poor majority. Mr Chávez proclaims that “being rich is bad”. He frequently lashes out at what he calls “the oligarchy”. Strange, then, that the streets of Caracas are clogged with big new 4x4s (Hummers are especially favoured), it is hard to get a table at the best restaurants, and art dealers and whisky importers have never had it so good. A new oligarchy seems to be rising in Venezuela on the back of the “Bolivarian Revolution”, named for the country's independence hero.

“Some of Chávez's speeches are for the gallery,” says Alberto Muller Rojas, a retired army general who was until recently the president's chief of staff. “And I'll give you an example: the attack on the bourgeoisie.” As evidence, General Muller singles out the banks: “the most extreme expression of the bourgeoisie” but “the most favoured sector” of the economy since Mr Chávez came to power in 1999.

Their prosperity owes much to an oil windfall: the price of Venezuela's main export has increased almost eightfold since 1999 and the economy has been growing at 10% a year. But government policies, too, have favoured the bankers and other intermediaries: inflation is close to 20% and the official value of the currency is twice its black-market exchange rate. So the savvy investor looks for access to cheap dollars, import opportunities and government contracts, all of which are largely conditional on political obedience. By contrast, manufacturers and farmers face price controls and risk sporadic official harassment. The result has been the rise of what is known, in obeisance to Bolívar, as the “Boli-bourgeoisie”.

Thanks to economic growth and social programmes, the government claims that only 30% of Venezuelan families now live in poverty, down from 55% at the peak in 2003. But according to a new report by the central bank, income inequality has widened slightly under Mr Chávez: the Gini coefficient—a statistical measure of inequality—has gone from 0.44 in 2000 to 0.48 in 2005.

Typical of the new “Boligarchy” is Wilmer Ruperti, a shipping broker who was once a merchant seaman. His ascent was helped by a two-month strike against Mr Chávez by workers at Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), the state oil company. Mr Ruperti chartered ships to help the government break the strike. Another is Arné Chacón, whose brother Jesse is the communications minister. Arné now owns half of Baninvest, a bank. He acquired it with loans for which his main apparent collateral was his official connections.

Mr Chávez claims to be pursuing economic nationalism and “endogenous development”. But farmers and manufacturers struggle against cheap imports. Though local dairy products are often missing from the supermarket shelves, Gouda and Emmenthal cheeses nestle beside Irish butter. The frozen chickens at Mercal, a government chain of subsidised grocery shops, are Brazilian. The importers who supply Mercal have grown rich. But Venezuela's ranchers are becoming extinct, threatened by expropriations, land invasions and price controls, as well as by extortion and kidnappings by criminal gangs.

Officials stress that two-thirds of the poor have benefited directly from government social policies. As well as Mercal, these include the “missions”, which offer education and health care. Up to 2m people get a small cash stipend. But despite hefty increases in the minimum wage and price controls on basic goods, inflation is eating away at the gains.

For those with connections, however, the rewards are great. The World Bank recently ranked Venezuela as the second-worst country in the Americas for the control of corruption, above only Haiti. Others confirm this perception. “We usually ask for 10%,” a foreign diplomat reports one government official admitting. “But some get greedy and want 15-20%.”

Since his re-election in December, Mr Chávez has frequently suggested capping the salaries of the highest-paid public officials. He also called on those with “excess” wealth to donate part of it to worthy causes. The response has been meagre. If he really tries to make socialism more than a slogan, some of the fiercest resistance may come from the new bourgeoisie his own policies have created."

http://www.economist.com/world/la/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9621513

I guess the republicans esp bush are jealous ?
 
You put up the wrong emoticon. Want me to edit it for you?

I had no idea I was in your guys thoughts so much, even when I'm not around! I'm a point of gossip in NeoCon circles! I'm touched and flattered!

Thanks guys! I had no idea people thought about me so much!


:clink:
 
I had no idea I was in your guys thoughts so much, even when I'm not around! I'm a point of gossip in NeoCon circles! I'm touched and flattered!

Thanks guys! I had no idea people thought about me so much!


:clink:

You kiddin? You had no idea? Sheesh, take your blinders off.
 
So he claims nationalistic goals and populism, but he is actually a cronyistic elitist globalist sellout. He's part of the nwo. He has all the backing of bush, in secret. They're all the same.
 
Naah Bush is against him for nationalizing oil and removing profit from oil companies. I think Bush is a bit jealous of Chavez though.
 
Another black mark for leftism and Chavez, I wonder what blackascoal thinks of his hero now?

Also anyone ever find it strange how leftists rail on against oil and pollution, but all of a sudden when it's a Socialist (Chavez) who benefits from oil production, then he can be their fucking hero with complete disregard of the environment that leftists love to claim they are saving from capitalists.

Right now in Venezuela, gas is beyond cheap at between 10 to 20 cents a gallon, thanks to government subsidies (handouts), probably the least green policy on the planet, yet ever hear an environmentalist talk about that one?
Their agenda is a political one, NOT an environmental one. Same reason the old USSR used to get a free pass on it's destruction of the environment, by the enviro-leftist movements.

I think a HELL of a lot more of Hugo Chavez than I do George Bush .. or ANY Bush for that matter. I almost exclusively buy Citgo gas, and in Chavez, Latin America finally has a leader with the balls and resources to take a stand against the plutocrats that desire only to rape his country of resources.

Thanks for asking.

With regards to the oil/environment question in Venezuela, many on the left ARE talking to Chavez about the problem .. and he's listening. He's devoted portions of his nationalized oil resolurces to the development of alternative fuels AND has reached out to other nations in the area to join in that effort.

Slaying Vampires: Chavez Proposes South American Energy Treaties
http://upsidedownworld.org/main/content/view/846/1/

Hugo Chavez announced in Buenos Aires on August 8th that he had signed an "energy security treaty" with Argentina. Currently, Argentina is experiencing an unusually cold winter and a lack of fuel, due to increased energy needs. Building new industries in Venezuela and supplying Venezuelan gas to Argentina, he said, are actions meant to diversify economies and increase national sovereignty and regional integration across the continent.

Chavez also announced plans to make similar agreements to guarantee an energy supply to the countries of Uruguay, Bolivia and Ecuador, which are the next stops on his current tour of the region. The agreement calls for "ample and sustained co-operation" on energy initiatives, including "the distribution of natural gas through pipelines, joint oil refining projects and coordinated efforts on distributing power and alternative fuels."

With Argentina’s help, Chavez said, Venezuela could develop industry, diversify its own economy, and move away from "the oil sultanate economic model."

He's also signed similar agreements with Uruguay

Venezuela, Uruguay sign Energy Security Treaty

It embraces the proposal of the First South America Energy Summit held on April in Margarita. It is an integral treaty, he said.

Chávez also announced the signing of an accord with the Uruguayan government to create a regasification company in that country to regasify the gas obtained from the project Gran Mariscal Sucre to be used in the petrochemistry and energy.

According to the Venezuelan President, the TSE includes several guidelines: the first one is composed by the oil and gas; the second guideline is aimed at the ethanol strictly need to use just 10% of the gasoline; the third guideline is the production of energy through alternative sources, such as the wind and solar energy.

Have you even heard of the First South America Energy Summit?

Of course you haven't .. you're on the right, and research is not the forte of the right. Before you decided to take Chavez to task, shouldn't you have done a bit of research first to find out what he's doing about oil and pollution? .. Lefties would have.

The summit was planned, organized, and funded by Chavez and held in Venezuela. Here's what you missed ...

The Union of South American Nations (Unasur) is the name that the leaders decided to give to the group of countries who will work together for the development of the continent. 10 of the 12 South American presidents attended the Summit including Hugo Chavez of Venezuela, Nestor Kirchner of Argentina, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil, Evo Morales of Bolivia, Rafael Correa of Ecuador, Álvaro Uribe of Colombia, Michelle Bachelet of Chile, Nestor Duarte of Paraguay, and the Prime Ministers of Guayana, Sam Hinds, and of Surinam, Gregory Rusland. Only Tabaré Vázquez of Uruguay and Alan García of Peru were not present.

The next step in the formation of the Union of South American Nations will be the election of a Permanent Executive Secretary. The headquarters of the new institution will be located in Quito, Ecuador, according to initial announcements.

Among the topics discussed was Hugo Chávez´ proposal for a "South American Energy Treaty" in order to guarantee energy, gas, petroleum and alternative fuels to the region for the next 100 years. Chávez warned of the growing energy needs in the future, predicting that by 2020 consumption will have grown by 47 percent in Latin America.

"That requires that we make decisions today, and agreements between countries and oil companies," he said.

It appears that he does indeed understand the need to diversify, create alternative energy sources, and position his nation and the entire region into the future. He's wisely using petrodiplomacy to create that position.

What is strange is how those on the right, like you, are suddenly "concerned" about oil and pollution .. but of course, only where that applies to Chavez. The US with 5% of the world's population uses 20% of the world's energy, which is light years from Venezuelan usage. Is that a problem for you?

Hugo Chavez is attempting to reverse decades of poverty in Venezuela and he's using the one resource he has to do so. At the same time he understands what needs to be done for the future and for the security of the entire region.

Chavez is a well-respected, legally elected leader .. neither of which you can say about Bush.
 
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