<< Previous Topic | Next Topic >>Return to Index  

Chavez Restyles Venezuela With '21st-Century Socialism'

November 13 2005 at 3:02 PM
No score for this post
JF  (no login)

 
Chavez Restyles Venezuela With '21st-Century Socialism'
by Juan Forero

Oct 30, 2005

New York Times Printer Friendly Version
EMail Article to a Friend

CARACAS, Venezuela - Firmly in power and his revolution now in overdrive, President Hugo Chavez is moving fast to transform Venezuela's economy by bucking free-market planning with what he calls 21st-century socialism: founding state companies, seizing abandoned private factories and establishing thousands of cooperatives and worker-run businesses.

The populist government is reorganizing the country's colossal oil industry, taking a bigger share from private multinationals. Planners are reorganizing the banking system, placing stringent restrictions on lending while creating state banks. Venezuela is also developing a state-to-state barter system to trade items as varied as cattle, oil and cement as far away as Argentina and as near as Cuba, its closest ally.

"It's impossible for capitalism to achieve our goals, nor is it possible to search for an intermediate way," Mr. Chavez said a few months ago, laying out his plans. "I invite all Venezuelans to march together on the path of socialism of the new century."

According to many mainstream economists, the change is simply a mix of plans taken from the protectionist policies of the 1960's and others adopted from Cuba and countries of the former Soviet bloc. It may not be communism - as detractors contend it is - but it mixes socialism with capitalism and what some call improvisation.

Many of the president's grandest plans are put into practice at the year-old Ministry for the Popular Economy. Planners there have already created 6,840 cooperatives that employ 210,000 people nationwide, many producing for the state.

The banking system is crucial to the government's plans. Regulators tightly control interest rates and demand that private banks devote 31.5 percent of all loans to agricultural projects, housing construction, tourism and microcredits, loans to tiny startup businesses.

The new measures - which include the seizure of factories, mines and fields the government says are unproductive - are playing well domestically. Mr. Chavez has an approval rating topping 70 percent.

"I'm not afraid of socialism and never have been," said Rivas Silvino, who works in a diaper factory run by workers and managers under a state co-management plan. "The world is afraid. I say, don't be afraid."

So far, no noticeable exodus of foreign companies operating in Venezuela has occurred. Banks and oil companies are making record profits thanks to oil prices that have left the country, the world's fifth-largest exporter, awash in petrodollars. This year, the oil industry is generating $20 billion for the government, nearly $8 billion more than last year.

Still, there is restlessness in the boardrooms, with executives worried about government intervention, which is sometimes seen as haphazard and improvised. Economists say the government has not made the investments needed in the oil sector. And political analysts and mainstream economists warn of recession and dourly note that foreign investment is about a third of what it was five years ago. They say that Venezuela's vast oil profits give the illusion of prosperity - the economy's growth rate is 9.3 percent - but that if prices fall, or Venezuela's growing spending catches up, the economy could founder.

Domingo Maza Zavala, the director of the Central Bank, warned of recession as soon as 2007. "There is uncertainty and instability because of the strategies being used by the state," he said in an interview. "If there was a strategy, defined, well established and clear and with objectives, this would create a climate of confidence that could generate a recuperation of investments."

In the tumbledown barrios where Mr. Chavez draws much of his support, it is easy to see why the new system has been warmly welcomed. The hills around Caracas and the farms in the outback are filled with cooperatives and other businesses in which the state plays an important role. Workers produce everything from shoes to corn.

Aura Matos, 28, is a seamstress in a state-run textile factory that sells to the state, a job she has held just a few weeks. "I was in my house, with nothing to do, and President Chavez and God gave me this opportunity," Ms. Matos said as she took a break from sewing jeans and blouses.

One of the government's most ambitious ventures is a new state airline, price $110 million so far. The airline, Conviasa, now has three planes, which regularly serve Bogota, Havana and other nearby destinations. It plans to expand to 14 jets in about a year and travel as far as Beijing and Europe.

What about competition in this cutthroat industry? "The philosophy is not to compete, but to cooperate with other airlines," said Wilmer Castro, who as Venezuela's tourism minister oversees the airline. "Our policy is to have fares that are lower than the others in the market."

Another project gives workers a stake in the ownership and management of tottering private companies. In return, management - made up of the original owners and the workers - receives government credits and other incentives.

"The businesses closed by the neoliberal system - factories and farms - are reopening, but it's done by the people," said Elias Jose Jaua, minister of the popular economy. "This is a state that has the duty to push and support this."

The state is also founding a mining company, an iron and steel company, a tractor factory and a state computer company, which Mr. Chavez says will produce "Bolivarian computers" in honor of his guiding light, the 19th-century independence hero Simon Bolivar. The government has even spoken about acquiring nuclear technology from Brazil and Argentina - emphasizing that it would be for peaceful purposes, like energy production or medical care.

 
Scoring disabled. You must be logged in to score posts.Respond to this message   
AuthorReply
J.O.
(no login)

A true feeling from common citizens of Venezuela to L.A. countries.

No score for this post
January 25 2006, 10:28 AM 

Hola, hermanos mexicanos. Quise compartir esto con uds. Por favor léanlo y
pónganlo a recorrer el mundo, que se sepa en todo el planeta que no
quereemos a este BICHO.
Chao.
Un beso.
María L. A.
> >>
> >>Te puedes quedar con todas las banderas y cubrir con ellas a los
> >>muertos de tu
> >>desgobierno. Yo me quedo con mi estrellado tricolor porque
> >>en él llevo a
> >>cuestas la vida que aún le sobra al pueblo que anhela con
> >>pasión, tu
> >>ausencia.
> >>
> >>Te puedes quedar con tantas almas como
> >>puedas comprar o
> >>robar de acuerdo al caso, pero el Alma Llanera es mía y
> >>ni siquiera te la
> >>presto.
> >>
> >>Te puedes quedar con un par de cuadros
> >>de Bolívar, o diez o
> >>veinte cuadros de Bolívar y unas cuantas esculturas
> >>con su caballo y su
> >>plaza, pero El Libertador es de una historia que no
> >>te pertenece, aunque
> >>intentes invadirla constantemente, porque tú,
> >>quiero que lo sepas, sólo
> >>eres y serás un error de imprenta en los
> >>libros de mis hijos.
> >>
> >>...Te puedes quedar con un museo, me quedo con
> >>Sofía... Te puedes quedar con un teatro, yo me quedo con Teresa...Te
> >>puedes
> >>quedar con un cerro, yo me quedcon El Ávila.
> >>
> >>En definitiva, Hugo, te
> >>puedes quedar con el país,
> >>pero nunca con la Patria;porque en ella
> >>vivimos, para tu infeliz
> >>sorpresa, todos los venezolanos que no te
> >>queremos.
> >>
> >>La Patria, es un sentimiento no un espacio, y por lo tanto
> >>es infinita, y viaja con uno,y llora con uno, y festeja con uno. La
> >>Patria,
> >>me toca a mí. Tú, mi
> >>despreciado y siempre desubicado. Hugo, te puedes
> >>quedar con las ganas
> >>
> >>M.L.A.

 
Scoring disabled. You must be logged in to score posts.
Current Topic - Chavez Restyles Venezuela With '21st-Century Socialism'  Respond to this message   
  << Previous Topic | Next Topic >>Return to Index  
Create your own forum at Network54
 Copyright © 1999-2009 Network54. All rights reserved.   Terms of Use   Privacy Statement  
Site Meter