Archive for November, 2010

Chavez’ foreign advisors ignore the country’s reality and economics

November 7, 2010

The Chavez “revolution” has attracted all sorts of frustrated Marxists who had been looking for an occupation ever since the Soviet Union fell apart. The ironic thing is that few of them have even bothered to learn much about Venezuela, Venezuelans and our idiosyncrasies. Even worse, their economic ignorance, both in general and about Venezuela, is so incredible that they help magnify with their advise, the ignorance of Chavez and his cohorts.

The latest such case has been Adam Woods. In a document published here in Spanish, entitled “Where is the Venezuelan Revolution Going?” Woods spews out a bunch of statements which simply demonstrate he knows little about economics, Venezuela and is just another theorist of revolutions. I like more Heinz Dieterich, who I also disagree with, but is more realistic and is more candid and honest about what he thinks about the revolution, even if I disagree with him.

Woods’ document has some remarkable statements which simply show his ignorance about history or economics, I don’t think you can give him much credit for understanding Venezuela, his quotes are all from very light weight sources and in itself the content he links to, has little credibility, but he shows it without criticism.

First, Woods concentrates on the “victory” on Sept. 26th. by Chavez. Had it been a victory we would have heard celebrations that night. But for Chavez, the only acceptable objective was a majority of the votes and a super majority in the Assembly. Neither one was achieved. But Woods sides with the revisionist opinion that it was a victory for Chavismo, despite the fact that it took two days for Hugo himself to sell us down that road. He then goes on to say that many lower middle class people have been “cheated” by the opposition, I suggest Mr. Woods looks at eleven years of Chavismo with constant attacks on the middle class, its values and its standard of living, to understand who truly has cheated who.

He then goes on to say that the solution is to nationalize the banks, the large capitals and the basic “levers” of the economy as a way of convincing the middles class that Chavez is on their side.

Where has Mr. Woods been all these years?

The nationalizations of PDVSA, large estates, cement companies, Guayana companies, etc. have yielded little for the Government or for the middle class. In fact, in each case, it is the middle class that has lost jobs, contracts and even a life. And they have seen little out of these nationalizations, as Mr. Woods think will come out of new ones.

For every middle class worker who loses a job or is affected by nationalizations, there is an extended family that is affected. We are still Catholic Mr. Woods!

Because Mr. Woods even dares to entitle a chapter of his document with the pompous title “The Nature of Venezuela’s economy” but then proceeds to show he has no clue what he is talking about.

He starts by citing the fact that the balance between the private and public economy has not changed since Chavez took over. But this is not because Chavez has been meek about destroying the pubic sector, but because even under these dire circumstances, the private sector has managed to create value, which Chavez has yet to figure out how to do. Piece of cake for the private sector which has lots 65% of its industrial companies. Easy to say, but a tragedy on itself.

And just to prove a point, Mr. Woods throws in this pearl of a statement:

“The superiority of a planned and nationalized economy was proven by the colossal success of the Soviet Union…”

Hello? Should I just stop here? Is this guy serious?

Because Mr. Woods then goes on to say that “the opposition  uses shortages to undermine the revolution”

Maybe he has not heard about Pudreval and how the Government has tried to control imports and production, with the result that the more it controls, the more it has to import. The more shortages there are.

And in one of the most laughable paragraphs, Mr. Woods dare blame inflation in Venezuela on “food inflation worldwide”, ignoring not only that inflation around the world is very low, but also that monetary management by Giordani, Merentes, Leon et al. has been abyssmal, with M2 increasing by a factor of four while international reserves have remained constant in the last six years. Perhaps Mr. Woods should read the works of a guy named Friedman who happened to say: “Inflation is a monetary phenomenom”. How right he was!

He then goes on to hail the nationalization of Agroisleña, one of the biggest missteps and errors of the Chavez administration. Agroisleña was such a complex business that I suspect it is harder to run it than Polar. Because the company was not just about agricultural supplies, it was about financing, technology, credit, advise. And we find out less than one month after its nationalization that sales in some regions are down to 20% of what they were, financing is canceled and no seeds or sophisticated products are coming into the country as credit lines have been canceled.

A roaring success. Mr, Woods would lead you to think, except that farmers need the financing, the technology and the seeds, but Mr. Woods probably has never visited a Venezuelan farm. And they need it now, not in three months. It’s all about crops…

And then he focuses on banks. quoting one of the local financial rags, Mr. Woods says: ” 91.2% of banks earnings come from commissions”

Jeez, that’s like saying that 100% of Apple’s earnings come from Macs, the rest is just useless. Forget iPhones, Ipads and all that junk.

Anyone that knows anything about Venezuela’s financial sector (Mr. Woods clearly not included) knows that most of the earnings of the banking system come from buying Government paper at high interest rates and paying low interest rates to depositors. The interest on the Government paper happens to be tax free.

Why doesn’t the Government eliminate the tax free nature of the securities?

Simple Watson or is it Woods? Because if they were not tax free, nobody would buy them and the Government would not be able to finance itself at interests rates which are below inflation.

So, Mr. Woods, the whole racket is a vicious circle. Banks generate revenues in many ways, that their commission revenues are almost equal to their earnings is really irrelevant. What matters is that the Chavez Government during the biggest windfall the country has ever seen, needed to issue these tax free securities to keep going. Eliminate them, and banks would be forced to lend, but Hugo would have no money to spend.

And speaking of lending, Mr. Woods argues that nationalizing the whole banking system would “give the middle class easy access to cheap credit”.

Sorry Mr. Woods. As this post a few days ago shows, Government banks, have never been very efficient about giving out credit. Of the top twenty banks, three of the four owned by the Government are last in loans and Banco de Venezuela, which you say “strengthens the Government position” is weaker and weaker as days go by, going from the top five in intermediation to almost the last four positions.

And let’s not talk about all the new banking regulations, such as the fact that when you charge something on your credit card, they have to send you an email or a and SMS. You see, only private banks are complying with this. And don’t ask Banco Bolivariano to even come close. If you go there with a check from a different agency, they can’t pay, the “system” is not ready. It ahs not been for months, this in a country where all banks (private ones, that is) pay a check on the spot)

But they are revolutionary banks, they are accountable to nobody. And nobody asks.

The point Mr. Woods, is that you seem to have very little idea about the idiosyncrasies of the average Venezuelan. First of all, you may not know this, but we have a shortage of well trained people in almost all fields. Second, under Chavez, we have lost all checks and balances, which means corruption is rampant and nobody is checking. Third, when inflation is 30%, it is difficult to be able to reward and promote those that do their jobs right, so that everyone is just trying to survive and the sense of entitlement and reward are simply lost.

But more importantly, those that are put in charge of all of these nationalized enterprises are simply put there because of their loyalty. They haven n understanding, knowledge or interest in what they are being handed out, other than what is the angle they can take advantage of to make some money. Typically, they are former or active military, accustomed to give orders, rather than talking or arguing what is best.

Thus, all your “suggestions” and contributions to the “debate” are simply useless, because they are theoretical elucrubations, which simply ignore our local reality.

And the revolution will be worse because of it!

A Brave Woman and Supreme Court Justice Speaks Out

November 4, 2010

Few people dare say in Venezuela what they think, least of all if they are civil servants. One exception is Justice of the Supreme Court Blanca Marmol de Leon. Justice Marmol has not only been outspoken when needed, but has also expressed the dissenting voice in many decisions which were clearly biased by the influence (and power) of the Government on Court members.

Thus, kudos to Justice Marmol for her statements today. In any other country what she is saying would create an upheaval, generate investigations and the like. In Venezuela, they are just part of every day life. Another lonely voice making accusations that show what a farce this Government is.

Here are the highlights:

“The independence of Judges is lost, they are not autonmous. They are scared because they can be fired or jailed”

“The Judicial Power is threatened. Judges are afraid and in a country where judges are afradid, citizens can not sleep well”

“The Venezuelan Supreme Court favors the policies of the Government”

In Venezuela, Supreme Court Justices last for twelve years or until retirement age. The Chavez administration wants to retire eight (out of 32) before January, so the current National Assembly selects and elects them. Legal? Yes! But it certainly violates the will and mandate of the people, as Justices need two thirds of the votes to be elected.

A brave woman indeed!

(Disclaimer: While I have never met Justice Marmol, I do know her husband, a fellow physicist)

Venezuelan Government Banks are stingy with loans

November 3, 2010

One of the arguments, which we know is false, for taking over and nationalizing institutions is that they are not socially responsible, productive, etc.. You have all heard the reasons. But the Government has turned out to be a terrible manager. This graph from today’s La Patilla (Which BTW is getting better and better except for the girl pictures):

shows how stingy Government banks are at lending. You can see in the y-axis, the percentage of intermediation (loans to deposits) of the top twenty banks in the system and in the x-axis the percentage of official, Government deposits.

As you can see, three of the four Government banks which are in the top twenty category by deposits are the worst ones in lending. And the fourth one is Banco de Venezuela whose intermediation ratio has been deteriorating significantly since it was taken over by the Government a year and four months ago. At this rate it will join the other three.

This shows what a waste of money and effort it has been to make these banks grow and absorb others and/or buy them. The private sector is and has always been more efficient at doing its job and this graph simply proves it.

How the Chavez Government illegally gives away our oil to Nicaragua

November 2, 2010

It is well known that Chavez gives away oil to many of his friendly countries (sometimes, if convenient to the unfriendly ones to) Most of these giveaways are done under the umbrella of programs approved by the Venezuelan National Assembly, many under terms that are really onerous to Venezuela, particularly a Venezuela that has so many problems and where money is short. In many cases, the receiving countries pay half within 90 days and the remainder in 15 years with ridiculously low interest rates.

Cuba gets away with not paying, by paying in kind with man hours of various services at wages and prices that Venezuelans wished they had.

And then there is Nicaragua. I had heard that Venezuela was using some convoluted way for giving away oil to Nicaragua, but until La Razon published the scheme on Sunday I had no idea of the magnitude of the rip-off on the Venezuelan people.

The document above is a proposal approved by President Chavez in April. It looks complicated. It is. Because it is designed to insure that Nicaragua ends up paying as little as possible in the end for our oil.

It works like this: PDVSA sells oil to Albanisa, a company owned 51% by Venezuela and 49% by Nicaragua. Albanisa agrees to pay for this within 90 days. Except that PDVSA transfers the debt to the Venezuelan Development Fund Fonden, which refinances the the debt, giving 50% of it a 14% discount and a year grace period for payment, and four years at 2% financing. But of course, of the 50% with the discount, Nicaragua ends up paying only 49% (if it does pay) because after all, Albanisa is 51% owned by Venezuela!

Thus, suppose it is US$ 100 million. The first 50%, is discounted 14%, so that the debt magically drops to US$43, but of course Nicaragua only has to pay 49% of that.

The other 50%, is refinanced to two companies, one called Caruna and the other Alba Caruna, also owned 51% by Venezuela and 49% by Nicaragua. Except these people get an even sweeter deal, as they get a two years grace period and are given 25 years to pay the remainder at the giveaway interest rate of 2% per year. Of course, half of that debt is owed by us Venezuelans.

This last part is almost like giving it away for free, not only are Caruna and Alba Caruna also owned by Venezuela with 51%, but if the Nicaraguans ever pay under the terms and world inflation stays at 2%, it would be like borrowing money free with huge discount to boot.

Most poor Venezuelans wish they could get such loans to, for example, fix their home, start a small business and why not, buy their family some food.

According to La Razon, this scheme is being used for Nicaragua to purchase some US$ 1.2 billion in oil a year, but in the end Nicaragua only pays for US$ 345 million a year.The whole thing then becomes a US$ 865 million a year give away to Chavez; buddies in Nicaragua.

Spoken like a true Dictator: If you mess with Hugo, he takes you over

November 2, 2010

Sunday’s Alo Presidente was messy and varied, a few buildings were expropriated and a steel company was nationlaized falsely accsued of charging too much (It’s prices have been regulated for four years). But lost in all the noise and the threat to Polar owner Lorenzo Mendoza (LM), was this pearl directed against Gustavo Cisneros President of the Cisneros group of companies which includes Venevisión:

I suggest to you (LM) that you go talk to Cisneros…look, he doesn’t mess with me anymore and he still has Venevisión…I even invited one of his reporters to my trip so that she could cover everything.

Can it be clearer than this? Not only you protect your property, you may even get some favors from it.

Spoken like a true mafiosi Dictator…

@caracasmetro Shakes Up The World of Subway Authorities

November 1, 2010

Today, a user of Caracas’ subway system was escorted out to the surface and denied access to the Caracas Metro system.

Why?

Because he dared take this picture:

and tweet it to the user @caracasmetro under his own name @alfredoahh

And who is @caracasmetro? Well, it is just a bunch of students who have taken it upon themselves not only to keep people who used the Caracas subway informed, but also to report problems, lack of maintenance and why not? The mistreatment of users.

The ironic thing is that what they are doing should be a perfect example of Chavez’ “social control” imposed by the “people” on the Government. Except the Government does such a lousy job that it does not want to be controlled from below. What it wants is to control the media so people believe that things are “normal” in Caracas’ subway system.

But neither the picture above, nor only 17 out of 41 trains working is normal. For those that use the system or have ever ridden the Caracas system, this picture below is not normal either:

The problem with the subway is that it is the victim of the same management style used by Chavez elsewhere. There have been a string of Presidents of the subway system, few of which had any clue not only about the subway system, but about how to run such a complex entity.

In the last three years alone, I recall General Gonzalez being President of the Metro, he has been sent to newer pastures as Head of the Bolivarian Militia. There is also the current Legal Advisor of Chavez at Miraflores, Dra. Guevara, Deputy elect Diosado Cabello, who the voters rejected at the Governorship of Miranda, as well as Claudio Farias, another former President of the Subway sent to the National Assembly and who was elected under the party slate.

Since there was also lots of problems and accusations of corruption, Chavez decided to go for an honest man, something that it is hard to find in his close circle of friends and coworkers. So, in his infinite wisdom, Chavez has decided to name as the new President of the Metro none other than the ideologue of XXIst. Century Socialism Mr. Haiman El Trudi. Mr. El Trudi has the reputation of being honest, is an engineer, but is also a poet and has devoted the last seven years at least to conceptualize the revolution and indoctrinate people in how Marxism/Socialism/Bolivarianism will save Venezuela.

Of course, he also has under his belt an underwhelming stay in the Minister of Planning, during which his biggest success was one month when he cut inflation in half. but in the end he promised to lower it and did not manage to do it and was removed. Thus, Mr. El Trudi now faces the task of running an organization orders of magnitude larger than the largest he ever managed (The Ministry). Except this one has trains, grease and angry users. Lots of the latter.

And now he has to assume his job under the watchful eye of @caracasmetro and its contributors, where no amount of BS or lies will placate the users, even if you try to kick them out. Because from now on his world and that of the other Metro authorities has been shaken up forever!

No more lies, no more excuses!