Lagniappe
Stephanie
Hanson : Blow
to oil-fueled socialism
Venezuela's
December 2 referendum on constitutional reforms followed street
protests (CSMonitor) by thousands of Venezuelan
university students. They proved to be a galvanizing force in
the surprise defeat of the referendum, which would have broadly
expanded President Hugo Chavez's powers (TIME). The Venezuelan
government, awash in oil revenues, has shared the windfall --
from the upper-middle class down to the poor in Caracas' barrios.
Yet shortages of basic foodstuffs like milk and eggs have increased
skepticism about economic reforms and eroded some of Chavez's
support among poor Venezuelans (LAT). Chavez accepted the poll's
result in a speech on December 3, adding that he would "continue
in the struggle to build socialism."
He will now
have to contend with an emboldened opposition (NYT). Experts
say the vote, Chavez's first electoral defeat in nine
years, could further polarize Venezuela's already divided population.
The referendum failed by a razor-thin margin of two percentage
points, according to the Electoral Commission. Speaking on a
panel at the Council of the Americas on November 30, Michael
Penfold, an associate professor at the Instituto de Estudios
Superiores de Administracion in Venezuela, said the country is
headed toward a "governability crisis." Andy Webb-Vidal,
a journalist and political-risk analyst, suggested at the same
panel that Chavez will continue to do as he pleases, given the
enabling law passed earlier this year that allows him to rule
by decree.
The president and his followers still control most of the government,
including the National Assembly, the state-owned oil company,
and the courts. The proposed constitutional changes would have
further centralized Chavez's power (Economist), allowing him
to be reelected indefinitely, giving him more leeway for declaring
states of emergency, and mandating the creation of regions
led by vice presidents picked by Chavez. Other amendments called
for economic changes, such as allowing the president control
over the central bank. A report (PDF) from the Venezuelan government
outlines (in Spanish) the sixty-nine amendments in the referendum.
Social programs
to bring cheap groceries, medical care, and education to the
poor have been the bulwark of Chavez's support,
but price distortions from the oil-fueled economy have hit many
of these constituents hard. Inflation, officially at 16 percent
but thought to be higher, is significantly raising the cost of
basic foodstuffs. Journalist Alexandra Starr says Chavez has
merely tapped into the Venezuelan belief that the government
should help its citizens. "Cheap gas strikes at the heart
of the arrangement many Venezuelans feel they have with the state:
'national patrimony belongs to all of us, and I deserve my share
of the spoils,'" she writes in The American Scholar.
Chavez's
political future will depend on the ability of Venezuela's
state-run oil company, PDVSA, to continue producing the heavy
crude that fuels his socialist revolution. The president spends
billions dollars of PDVSA's revenue on social programs, handouts
to foreign governments such as Cuba, and defense. Though the
company's financial dealings and level of oil production are
largely opaque, many analysts say oil production is down and
the company is not investing enough. Venezuela was the ninth-largest
global producer in 2006, according to the U.S. Energy Information
Administration. Two decades ago, PDVSA was considered a top-notch
oil company. Now, it "amounts to the president's $35 billion
petty-cash drawer," writes Tina Rosenberg in the New York
Times Magazine.
Stephanie
Hanson is a writer and copy editor
for Council
on Foreign Relations .
Petroleumworld not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
note: This commentary was originally published by The Washington
Post,
on December 03, 2007. Petroleumworld reprint this article in
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Petroleumworld
News 12/04/07
Copyright© 2007
Stephanie
Hanson. All rights reserved.
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