Monday, February 9, 2009

I Drink Your Milkshake!

Venezuela, an archetypal petro-state, was bound to suffer when the price of oil collapsed late last year, but the situation has worsened rapidly, I think even faster than most expected. The government looks to be scaling back its ideologically-motivated ambitions to divert exports from the US to China. They can't find state-owned oil companies willing or able to carry out new developments, so are turning to the same private foreign firms they spurned in recent nationalizations. PDVSA, the massive national oil company, and big private service companies, are rumored to be cutting thousands of jobs to save money and deal with OPEC output reductions. Production is slowing as the government is falling behind in its billion dollar plus debts to oil service firms.

These signals are especially surprising given that oil prices are still relatively high, between $35-$40 a barrel for Venezuela's unusually heavy crude, compared to about $7 when President Hugo Chávez came to power in 1998. And the country should have a bigger cushion after a year of $100+ prices. Also, the government may be holding more bad economic and employment news until after Chávez's February 15 referendum on eliminating presidential and other term limits.

So what does it all mean? Chávez's second decade in power (which begins today after a hastily-called national holiday) may be much rougher than his first. He no longer has his handy foil, and efforts to stir things up with Obama don't seem to be catching on, for now. Without the slush fund from off-budget oil profits, Chávez is hard-pressed to fulfill his generous foreign aid commitments, and he may start to get the cold shoulder from fair-weather international friends. At home, Chávez is prioritizing social programs over oil production or investment, but he can't continue that downward spiral for too long and any reduction in benefits will erode his somewhat fickle power base. It's no surprise Venezuela relies on oil, but under Chávez the dependence has reached the point that it accounts for over 90 percent of export revenue and a huge chunk of the budget. Now it appears that well is running dry.

(photo from rhaaga's photostream)

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