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:
10/1/2008; 7:28:15 PM

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Thursday, September 18, 2008


Things have been hectic for me this week, will try to post, but meanwhile Toby Bottome at Veneconomia says a lot of what I wanted to say:

A very heavy load from Veneconomy

In the decade with Hugo Chavez at the helm, the growth of a non-productive State has been fostered at the expense of the restriction of the private sector, which does generate income and create jobs. This policy has generated a hypertrophy in the state apparatus of such proportions that it has made the country totally dependant on oil and placed it in a dangerously vulnerable position in these times of low oil prices.

Last week, Hugo Chavez himself admitted this weakness and gave the first official sign that he neither can nor does he want to cope with this heavy load, when he stated, "We cannot continue incorporating an additional 50,000 workers a year, that is not sustainable" the squandering has to stop, "it is necessary to be efficient with spending." "We are given to squandering resources,  we ourselves have increased the practice of political patronage." Even though Chavez is right and he had been warned of the danger, he spoke out too late.

One sign that the State is top heavy is the increase in the number of ministries, 28 in all with the creation of the Ministry for Women's Affairs in June this year. That's twelve more than in 1998 when Chavez promised to put an end to Venezuela's inflated bureaucracy.

Added to this is that, after the innumerable nationalizations, state takeovers and/or confiscations that the government has been heading up, more than a dozen private companies have become oil-dependant, inefficient organizations. And that is quite apart from the creation of hundreds of cooperatives and nearly a dozen missions, which are also subsidized with oil dollars.

But the most revealing sign of this dangerous hypertrophy of the government apparatus is the attendant excessive growth in the number of workers employed by the State. According to data from the National Statistics Institute, the government services' payroll has grown by 72.1% in eight years, from 1,283,963 people in 2000 to 2,209,862 as at July 30, 2008. Some analysts are even of the opinion that the government payroll is underestimated, as, if the employees of a certain type of State contractors that have a dependant relationship with government agencies are added, the number could easily reach 4 million. It is worth mentioning that one of the agencies that have most increased their payroll is the Ministry of Defense, with the hiring of more than 300,000 people for the National Command of the National Reserve, followed by PDVSA, where the payroll went from 45,000 workers in 2002 to more than 100,000 in 2008.

Meanwhile, the number of employees in the private sector has grown by only 15.5% since 2000, from 4,026,064 to 4,650,722.

Now, with the drop in oil prices, the VenezuelanState will find it even less viable to continue financing this huge payroll; not even if the barrel stays at $100.

What is worse, the collapse of the oil price bubble finds the private sector diminished and without either the capacity or the flexibility to absorb this number of workers. Unfortunately, the outlook for Venezuelans includes higher unemployment, increased poverty, and more hunger.

9:57:04 PM    comment []



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