The
oil sector is at the heart of the current political
crisis in Venezuela in which President Chavez was
first ousted by a coup on April 12, 2002 and then
reinstated by a counter-coup, only two days later.
Venezuela is the fourth largest oil exporter in the
world. The critical importance of the oil sector for
the national economy is underscored by the fact that
oil generates nearly 75% of Venezuela's export revenue
and 50% of its tax income. Additionally, Venezuela
is an important overseas source of oil for the US,
accounting for 13% of its fuel imports.
Incidentally, one of the key policy measures adopted
by Chávez when he first came to power in a
landslide election victory in 1998 was to improve
Venezuela's compliance record among OPEC countries.
This implied that Venezuela would assiduously conform
to the production quotas agreed upon by the OPEC constituents
to avoid overproduction and a downward pressure on
prices. The policy had two effects.
On the external front, it acted as a stabilizing influence
on international oil prices thereby earning him the
goodwill of a section of the OPEC member countries.
While this insulated him from external political pressures,
it also meant that he could use his newfound influence
to manipulate OPEC policy on prices to suit Venezuela's
needs. For example, he engineered a price hike in
2001 by aggressively lobbying to cut production quotas
leaving his government with a windfall that was used
to increase social spending - a key component of his
domestic policy. In fact, the trade surplus helped
the country to maintain a strong currency and a low
inflation rate, which endeared him to the country's
poor, who comprise nearly 80% of the population.
However, those gains have fast dissipated. A combination
of weaker oil prices – in February 2002, the
price of a barrel of oil sank to $ 15.50, below the
$18.50 assumed in the budget – and an output
cut threatens to drag the entire economy into recession.
Although, oil prices have surged upwards by nearly
40% in the last couple of months owing to a rise in
the geopolitical risk premium, the threat of a recession
looms large. The unemployment rate in the economy
is currently as high as 15%, raising apprehensions
of escalated anti-social violence in Caracas, already
one of the most crime-infested cities of Latin America.
Not surprisingly, jittery investors have been siphoning
capital out of the country at record rates fearing
enhanced exchange-controls. The resultant outflow
of capital to the tune of nearly $ 2 billion this
year has meant that foreign exchange reserves with
the Central bank are at dangerously low levels.
In a bid to shore up reserves, Chávez abandoned
the country's five-year-old crawling band exchange
rate mechanism and allowed the bolivar, the local
currency, to float. The underlying expectation was
that the bolivar, which was estimated to have been
overvalued by almost 35%, would depreciate under market
pressures, facilitating renewed reserve-accumulation
through competitive exports.
At the same time, he also announced a fiscal adjustment
package aimed at controlling government expenditures.
The new package outlined a cut in government expenditure
by 7 % to help close a yawning fiscal deficit estimated
by investment banks to come in as high as 7 % of gross
domestic product. Additionally he announced a change
in the management of the state-owned Petroleos de
Venezuela, the oil company that controls oil production
in Venezuela. The changeover, he felt, would enable
the government to seek greater tax dividends from
the PDVSA as the existing management, backed by powerful
business interests, was blocking rate hikes. Also,
the management was no longer in a mood to abide by
the OPEC production quotas, the cornerstone of the
government's foreign policy.
The move, however, alienated the trade unions of the
company who were threatened on two counts. On the
one hand, a depreciating currency would necessarily
entail inflationary pressures in the long run that
would squeeze wages. On the other hand, the management
changeover signaled the prospects of fresh taxation
of wages.
On April 7,2002, workers at the PDVSA started partial
strike action to protest against management changes.
By April 10, the partial strike had fanned out into
a 48-hour strike called jointly by trade unions and
business groups, to be extended indefinitely. In the
demonstrations that followed, 10 people died, allegedly
killed by the President's supporters. Soon, as inevitable
fallout of the President's organic relationship with
the army, the latter was dragged into the conflict.
On April 12, 2002, under pressure from a section of
the army who blamed him for the deaths during the
opposition demonstrations, Chávez resigned.
The coup brought Pedro Carmona, a business leader,
to power as interim President.
To complicate matters there were indications that
the Pentagon had tacitly backed the coup leaders.
Unlike his predecessors, who had been content with
assured cuts from the country's oil revenues, Chávez
had been actively using Venezuela's oil resource as
an instrument to carve out a foreign policy free of
US influence. Towards that end, he fostered a close
relationship with the Cuban dictator, Fidel Castro
and is said to have agreed to supply oil to Cuba under
generous conditions including a payment holiday and
soft credit terms. On the same lines, he tried to
increase his clout with the OPEC by visiting Iraq's
Sadam Hussain and Libya's Mohammar Khaddafi, both
dreaded by the US. Also, as if to underscore his provocative
policies, he publicly declared his sympathies for
left-wing guerillas in Columbia.
The White House openly blamed Chávez for his
fall from power, and pointedly declined to voice any
regret about his downfall. The cat finally slipped
out of the bag when the Administration refused to
comment on the unconstitutional nature of Chávez's
removal from office.
However, the broad support for Carmona from unions,
opposition parties and sectors of the armed forces
collapsed within hours after he decreed the dissolution
of the legislature and the Supreme Court, suggesting
the coup had itself been "hijacked" by a
hard core of far-right military figures. A counter-coup
was engineered by battalion commanders close to Chávez,
reinstating him in power.
Meanwhile in Washington, asked whether the administration
now recognizes Chávez as Venezuela's legitimate
president, one administration official replied, "He
was democratically elected," then added, "Legitimacy
is something that is conferred not just by a majority
of the voters, however.
April 18, 2002.
[Sources: Financial Times www.ft.com
Business Standard, April 18, 2002
New York Times, April 16, 2002 www.nytimes.com]
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