1 / 16

Structural Changes and Planning of the Economy in Revolutionary Venezuela

Structural Changes and Planning of the Economy in Revolutionary Venezuela. Eduardo Torrealba III October 13 th , 2010. Authors. Rémy Herrera University of Paris, France Researcher at CNRS (National Centre of Scientific Research) Paulo Nakatani

libitha
Download Presentation

Structural Changes and Planning of the Economy in Revolutionary Venezuela

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Structural Changes and Planning of the Economy in Revolutionary Venezuela Eduardo Torrealba III October 13th, 2010

  2. Authors • Rémy Herrera • University of Paris, France • Researcher at CNRS (National Centre of Scientific Research) • Paulo Nakatani • Federal University of EspiritoSanto, Brazil • Specializes in capitalism, contemporary socialism, economic policy, monetary policy, external sector and fiscal policy

  3. Background • Location • Population

  4. Oil Economy 9th largest oil producer in the world

  5. Oil Economy Oil prices and GDP not directly linked

  6. Hugo Chavez • Served in the military since age of 17 • Attempted coup in 1992 • Elected President in 1998 • Founder of the Bolivarian movement • Term limits abolished in 2009

  7. Redistribution of Wealth • Gini Index of .5 in 1997 • Top 5% owned 75% of land • 1997-2006 • Oil production GDP% change • 18.7% to 13.8% • Public spending increased • Oil revenue of state • Increase in oil price • 5.8% to 16.1%

  8. Redistribution of Wealth • Implementation of social programs Healthcare services Enrolment in education services Illiteracy Infant mortality • Impacts over 17 million Venezuelans • Financed by PDVSA • 7.3% of GDP

  9. Policy Reforms • Moving toward socialism • Fixed exchange rate in 2003 • 2002-2003 Crisis • Increases in public spending • Decreased autonomy of central bank • Currently aimed at fighting inflation • Failure

  10. Capital Problems • Capital flights • Legal • $2.3 Billion • Illegal • $2.86 Billion • Exchange rate • Officially 2,147:1 • Illegal 5,350:1

  11. Successes • Lowest inflation since 1970s • 19.6 % since election vs. 49.4% before • High GDP growth • 13% since 2003 • Increase in foreign reserves • $14.9 billion to $37.4 billion • Capable of paying off all external debt

  12. Transition to Socialism • No expropriation of private property • Continuing presence of “dominate” class • State controls strategic sectors • Oil • Electricity • Telephone

  13. Decentralized Planning • Founded on 2001 Organic Law of Planning • Councils • Local Councils of Public Planning • District Councils • 420,000 people • Council of Workers • Council of Peasants

  14. Authors’ Conclusions • Transition to full socialism not complete • First time oil rent has been used to help poor • Rethink strategy since 2007 defeat • Needs support of all progressive nations

  15. My Conclusions • Pros • Increased public services • Lower inflation and high GDP growth • Cons • Slow erosion of rights • Cult of personality • Frontline episode “The Hugo Chavez Show”

  16. Questions?

More Related