The Devil's Excrement





  The Devil's Excrement
Observations focused on the problems of an underdeveloped country, Venezuela, with some serendipity about the world (orchids, techs, science, investments, politics) at large. A famous Venezuelan, Juan Pablo Perez Alfonzo, referred to oil as the devil's excrement. For countries, easy wealth appears indeed to be the sure path to failure. Venezuela might be a clear example of that.
Last updated:
4/2/2007; 9:57:57 PM

The 2005 Weblog Awards
November 2006
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30    
Oct   Dec












Google


WWW
The Devil's Excrement


Subscribe to this blog in Radio:
Subscribe to "The Devil's Excrement" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

E-mail this blog's author, Satan's Poop Inc. Paila Master:
Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.
 

Tuesday, November 14, 2006



This post is a translation of today’s Editorial by Teodoro Petkoff in Tal Cual which I dedicate to all the fools that still believe the Venezuelan Government is democratic or believes in fair play. The fingerprint machines are in a very wide sense symbolic of all of the perversions this Government stands for: They are used to violate people’s rights, they are used to prey on people’s fears, they are used to intimidate and abuse the people and stop their opinions and the existence of the fingerprint machines in itself indicates that their purchase had to involve some shady dealings, since over US$ 117 million were spent for a system that can not and does not do what is supposed to do. I had always suspected that the evil and perverse use of these machines was thought up after the fact, after someone paid someone off to have the country purchase them. It all started with money corruption and ended with the perverse violation of the people’s rights to express themselves freely. This is what those that I dedicate this post to are defending. Let it be their shame.

Dummy Capturing Machines by Teodoro Petkoff in Tal Cual

If there was anything left to convince skeptics that the affable fingerprint capturing machines do not fulfill any role other than that of intimidation, it is the decision to suppress their use in 16 out of 24 states of the country. Only in 8 states will they be put in use. If the purpose that is attributed to them is that of guaranteeing that a voter can not cast a ballot more than once, because the registration of his fingerprint would stop him from voting again in one or more additional places to that one in which he is registered, the suppression of the machines in two thirds of the country negates their supposed intention. Thus, it is obvious that the only real function of such devices is much different than what is being said.

Let’s suppose that there is an electoral criminal, with triple ID cards, that manages to register in centers in Caracas, Vargas and Aragua. He votes in Caracas, very early, goes down to La Guaira, votes there and then he goes to Tejerias (Aragua) and votes again. In fact, if he has four ID’s, he still has time to go to Barquisimeto and vote there. Neither in la Guaira, nor in Tejerias, nor in Barquisimeto there will be fingerprint machines, thus it will be impossible to verify if this citizen already voted in different places. All of this, of course, if our criminal managed to elude or erase the stain left by the indelible ink in his index finger. The conclusion is obvious: if those machines really have as a purpose to insure the principle of “one voter, one vote”, it is not possible to achieve it without those toys being present in each and ALL of the 12 thousand existing voting centers. Since it was not set up that way, one is forced to conclude that its goal is not that one.

What is the sense then, in leaving fingerprint machines in 8 out of the 24 states? The most elementary common sense indicates that if it is possible to eliminate them in 16 federal entities, it is because they are also not needed in the remaining eight.

Why do they then keep them? Just by “coincidence” the eight states that won the lottery of the fingerprint machines concentrate 48% of the total voters and, by the way, almost all are the same ones where the vote of the opposition has traditionally been, the highest. The conclusion falls out under its own weight. Because there are still citizens that still believe the story that the fingerprint capturing machines allow for the identification of the vote, thus they need to scare them so that they don’t vote. Citizens that oppose the Government and citizens that supposedly back it, but whose fidelity the bullies of the regime are not sure of, and they need to make sure that the beneficiaries of the misiones, public employees, members of cooperatives vote “as they should” because, if they don’t, they are threatened with the fact that they will be caught by the machines and will pay dearly for daring to do vote that way.

The fingerprint capturing machines are truly made only to capture dummies.

Dummy capturing tricks. Intimidating devices that play with the credibility and the fear of people. If the CNE wants, truly, be, as its President said, “three color, three little colors (those of the flag)”, it has to eliminate ALL the fingerprint capturing machines and thus get rid of that factor of distortion of the popular will which is the fear (unfounded, by the way) that the vote may not be secret.


8:00:08 PM    comment []



Financial crisis start not with a bang, but with a whimper and I just wonder whether that was a very loud whimper that we heard today.

For months, the Venezuelan  Government had been announcing the infamous “Bono del Sur” a joint issue between Venezuela and Argentina. After almost six months, it was finally offered last week, as the biggest giveaway in history. Essentially, the Government was selling US dollars at a very steep discount to the parallel market, which last week stood at Bs. 3,000 per US$, while the buyers of the bond could purchase dollars somewhere between Bs. 2,300 and 2,400 to the US$. .

It was such a sweet deal, that banks and brokers were offering financing without any guarantees, corporations were putting in multimillion dollar orders and everyone wanted a piece of the pie and was counting on getting a piece of it.

Thus, orders were received in such large amounts, that if you requested more than US$ 5 million or over, you only got US$ 27,000, half of it in a Venezuelan bond that only pays in local currency, even if denominated in dollars. According to the Government, they received orders for US$ 9 billion, but I suspect it was more, much, much more. Except if they said how much more it was, there could be real trouble, as people realize the parallel market rate only has one way to go: up!

You see, the Government has held the official exchange rate stable for almost two years, except that in those same two years it hass spent money as if there was no tomorrow of there was a presidential election coming. Except that last time there was a devaluation in February 2005, monetary liquidity stood at US$ 21.3 billion and international reserves at US$ 23.8 billion, while today liquidity stands at US$ 45.95 billion, while reserves are at US$ 34.6 billion and liquidity should jump up by at least US$ 7.5 billion before the end of the year.

Thus, while reserves have barely increased by 50% (and dropping!), liquidity will be up by almost 200% by the end of the year and there is no stopping it, as the Government spends and spends.

Corporations had been waiting for a bond like “Bono del Sur” to buy foreign currency, but they got very little today, thus they will move their purchases to the parallel market in the next few weeks and push the parallel rate higher.

You see, the Government thought it could fool the rules of economics and as usual you can, but only for a while. The Government invented this idea that it could buy bonds from Argentina and turn around and sell them to “friends and family” at a cheap price, who would make a mint and supply the parallel market with ample liquidity. And it worked for a while, except that the rate was kept artificially low as inflation grew, after more than US$ 4 billion was supplied to the parallel market. Then a couple of months ago, the rate jumped up and since then the Government has been unable to push it down.

Meanwhile corporations waited for the announced bonds, before going to the parallel market. Bu today they realized they got very little from the bond and the parallel market is much higher than when they first started thinking about it. In fact, upon the news of how little was allocated to each order and that the issue was not increased in size, the parallel market jumped up and while the last quote of Bs. 3,500 to the US$ was probably never really paid by anyone, purchases were made at Bs. 3,400 per US$, a full 13% higher than last Friday.

Those that got the bonds made a mint, a full Bs. 1,000 per US$ allocated if the parallel rate holds up near Bs. 3,300 per US$. Those that benefited were those that put in many smaller orders rather than one large one.  But for corporations the message is clear: Don’t look for the Government to approve much for you in the future.

In fact, there appears to be little the Government can do at this time. Even if the planned PDVSA issue came to market, it would barely absorb half of the liquidity to be generated between now and the end of the year, leaving the pressures on the parallel market out there.

It is in the end a self-fulfilling prophecy: The Government overspends, creates too much liquidity, has exchange controls in place and in the end has to create instruments to absorb the excess liquidity. Except that resources are finite and at some point things catch up with you. For example, a good rule of thumb is that for every US$ 1 per barrel drop, Venezuela loses US$ 1 billion in oil income and thus reserves. Thus, so far the recent drop accounts for some US$ 15 billion in income that has simply disappeared from the future unless oil prices were to recover.

But if they did, it would just postpone the problem to a later date. The Government could sell tomorrow US$ 10 billion and pressures would be barely reduced but reserves would be at levels which would be considered dangerous for the high monetary liquidity in the monetary system.

In the end, the trap created by the Government is too complex and only has one simple, quick and perverse solution: devaluation. By reducing the gap between the official and the parallel rate, pressures on the parallel market are reduced temporarily, even if no structural solution has been found to the problem. That is what happens when you run irresponsible policies like those of this Government. The problem is that it is the poor that get hurt the most by a devaluation.

Such irresponsible policies are not new in Venezuela, but they have never been carried out and taken to the levels of today. What is most incredible is that there seems to be little awareness as of yet, of the problem the finances of the country are in, unless the events of today opened someone’s eyes in the Chavez administration.

But I doubt it. My feeling is that today was the beginning of a crisis that will lead to a larger than expected devaluation in the first few months of 2006, no matter who wins in December. And unless corrective measures are taken, what began today with a whimper will end up badly and with a bang in the next couple of years.


12:16:54 AM    comment []



© Copyright 2007 Satan's Poop Inc. Paila Master. Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.
Last update: 4/2/2007; 9:57:58 PM.
Powered by
BloGalaxia

Directory of Politics Blogs