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Chavez's Record: An Oil Bonanza Squandered?

mbig

onomatopoeic
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Hopefully Hugo the Megalomaniac will pass quietly (but soon) into the night.

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505245_162-57518326/chavezs-record-an-oil-bonanza-squandered/
or
Chavez's Record: An Oil Bonanza Squandered? - TheStreet
or
Chavez's record: an oil bonanza squandered?
Sep 22, 2012

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — On the streets of Caracas, vast slums blanket the hillsides while squatters hang laundry in the windows of abandoned buildings. Trash-strewn alleys are riddled with potholes and lined with broken streetlamps. The city's main waterway, the polluted Guaire River, is known more for sewage than swimming.

While oil has ushered in Spectacular construction projects for glittering Middle Eastern cities, including the world's tallest building in Dubai and plans for branches of the Louvre and Guggenheim museums in Abu Dhabi, it's brought relatively meager changes to Venezuela, which holds the world's Largest proven oil reserves. Nearly 14 years after President Hugo Chavez took office, and despite the biggest oil bonanza in Venezuela's history, there's little outward sign of the nearly one trillion petrodollars that have flowed into the country. Venezuela has undoubtedly changed during Chavez's tenure. The populist president has used the oil wealth to buttress his support through cash handouts, state-run grocery stores and a gamut of other social programs. With more money in the economy, incomes are higher and the number of people living in poverty has fallen.

Unemployment has dropped from more than 13 percent in 1999 to about 8 percent. The country has also achieved rapid improvement on the U.N. Human Development Index, which measures a range of indicators from living standards to life expectancy."We're applying a successful program — successful politically, successful socially, successful economically," Chavez said at a news conference. "With flaws, of course, but it's successful. We're laying the foundations of a historic project that will take our entire lifetime." All of which makes him a tough incumbent to beat in the upcoming Oct. 7 election.

Yet some experts say Chavez could have done much more to improve the country's infrastructure, boost its economy and invest in the very oil industry that keeps Venezuela afloat. "It's overwhelmingly clear that Venezuela has wasted the windfall," said Francisco Monaldi, an economist and director of the International Center of Energy and the Environment at Caracas' IESA business school. "You should have had much greater economic growth, much greater reduction of poverty."

Among Latin American countries, the economies of Brazil, Chile, Peru and Argentina all have expanded More rapidly than Venezuela's since Chavez took office in 1999, recording average growth between 3% and 5% a year.
Venezuela, by contrast, averaged a 2.8%
annual increase of gross domestic product between 1999 and 2011, according to International Monetary Fund figures.
By that measure, the country was outperformed by Every other member of OPEC except Libya. Even war-torn Iraq posted higher growth.

Some Venezuelans, such as tennis instructor Naybeth Figueroa, say Chavez has simply channeled money toward his "Chavista" supporters while neglecting deeply ingrained problems such as soaring murder rates, inflation, crumbling infrastructure and poor government services. Venezuela now ranks among the most violent and corrupt places on earth.
"The country is falling to pieces," Figueroa said. "Where is the oil money going?"

Where the money went.....
 
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GDP has gone up, but how about reduction in poverty ... As economists like Stiglitz point out GDP is a horrible indicator of economic health, all it shows is volume.

BTW, Countries like Brazil, Chile and Argentina (don't know about Peru), have all gone along the social-democratic route, the same direction as Venezuela (with less pomp).

The article is nonsense, so the government of Venezuela have cut poverty by leaps and bounds, brought millions of the poor into economic and policital life, increased health and social services and so on .... Yet he hasn't done enough so he's a failure ....

I don't see the crticism of his predesesor ... I don't see criticisms of right wing governments where poverty INCREASES ... Its so rediculous, things are getting better, but right wingers say "its not perfect so it must be failing," when right wing programs FAIL.

THE UAE, is a whole different issue, and believe me, that country is not succeding due to "free trade" you have plenty of State-Capitalism, debt slavery, and corporatism in that country, you also had a giant bubble built up and collapse.
 
Poverty went down all over the region.
Other OPEC countries boomed.
Yet Chavez' Venezuela, who had a Trillion dollar 'Lotto' win, can't even match Brazil, Argentina, Peru, who had no such Windfall.

But I give you credit for answering at least.. your buddy is complete Washout in that respect, just PAINTING/PROPAGANDIZING this section mercilessly for a year.
 
Poverty went down, but not nearly as dramatically as Venezuela.

Brazil, Argentina and Peru have been on a left turn in the last couple of years and overturning the neo-liberal economic policies and they are doing well ... Yeah.

I am personally not a giant fan of Chavez, I think his reforms are great and his economic policy is great, but I think its time he steps down, in my opinion he's making it a Chavista revolution, not a Venezeulan one. That being said, his natinoalization of energy and oil and his support of cooperatives (which NO ONE ever talks about) are great.

But maybe instead look at countries like colombia or Mexico that have followed the more neo-liberal route ... the ones following social democratic policies are doing better.
 
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