Zum Inhalt springen

Benutzer:Fakler/Wirtschaft von Venezuela

aus Wikipedia, der freien Enzyklopädie
Dies ist eine alte Version dieser Seite, zuletzt bearbeitet am 26. November 2019 um 07:04 Uhr durch 73.244.26.112 (Diskussion) (History). Sie kann sich erheblich von der aktuellen Version unterscheiden.

Vorlage:Short description Vorlage:Use dmy dates Vorlage:Use American English Vorlage:Infobox economy The economy of Venezuela is based largely on the petroleum and manufacturing sectors,[1] and has been in a state of total economic collapse since the mid-2010s.[2] In 2014, total trade amounted to 48.1% of the country's GDP.[3] Exports accounted for 16.7% of GDP and petroleum products accounted for about 95% of those exports.[4] Venezuela is the sixth largest member of OPEC by oil production. Since the 1920s, Venezuela has been a rentier state, offering oil as its main export.[5] From the 1950s to the early 1980s, the Venezuelan economy experienced a steady growth that attracted many immigrants, with the nation enjoying the highest standard of living in Latin America. During the collapse of oil prices in the 1980s the economy contracted, the currency commenced a progressive devaluation and inflation skyrocketed to reach peaks of 84% in 1989 and 99% in 1996, three years prior to Hugo Chávez taking office. The nation has experienced hyperinflation since 2015, far exceeding the oil price collapse of the 1990s.

Venezuela manufactures and exports heavy industry products such as steel, aluminum and cement. Production is concentrated around Ciudad Guayana, near the Guri Dam, one of the largest dams in the world and the provider of about three-quarters of Venezuela's electricity. Other notable manufacturing includes electronics and automobiles as well as beverages and foodstuffs. Agriculture in Venezuela accounts for approximately 4.7% of GDP, 7.3% of the labor force and at least one-fourth of Venezuela's land area.[6] Venezuela exports rice, corn, fish, tropical fruit, coffee, pork and beef. The country is not self-sufficient in most areas of agriculture.

In spite of strained relations between the two countries, the United States has been Venezuela's most important trading partner. American exports to Venezuela have included machinery, agricultural products, medical instruments and cars. Venezuela is one of the top four suppliers of foreign oil to the United States. About 500 American companies are represented in Venezuela.[1] According to Central Bank of Venezuela, between 1998 and 2008 the government received around US$325 billion through oil production and exports in general.[17] According to the International Energy Agency (as of August 2015), the production of 2.4 million barrels per day supplied 500,000 barrels to the United States.[18]

Since the Bolivarian Revolution half-dismantled its PDVSA oil giant corporation in 2002 by firing most of its 20,000-strong dissident professional human capital and imposed stringent currency controls in 2003 in an attempt to prevent capital flight,[7] there has been a steady decline in oil production and exports and a series of stern currency devaluations, disrupting the economy.[8] Further yet, price controls, expropriation of numerous farmlands and various industries, among other disputable government policies including a near-total freeze on any access to foreign currency at reasonable "official" exchange rates, have resulted in severe shortages in Venezuela and steep price rises of all common goods, including food, water, household products, spare parts, tools and medical supplies; forcing many manufacturers to either cut production or close down, with many ultimately abandoning the country as has been the case with several technological firms and most automobile makers.[9][10] In 2015, Venezuela had over 100% inflation—the highest in the world and the highest in the country's history at that time.[11] According to independent sources, the rate increased to 80,000% at the end of 2018[12] with Venezuela spiraling into hyperinflation[13] while the poverty rate was nearly 90 percent of the population.[14] On 14 November 2017, credit rating agencies declared that Venezuela was in default with its debt payments, with Standard & Poor's categorizing Venezuela as being in "selective default".[15][16]

History

Christopher Columbus sailed along the eastern coast of Venezuela on his third voyage in 1498, the only one of his four voyages to reach the South American mainland. This expedition discovered the so-called "Pearl Islands" of Cubagua and Margarita off the northeastern coast of Venezuela. Later in 1499 Spanish expeditions returned to exploit these islands' abundant pearl oysters, enslaving the indigenous people of the islands and harvesting the pearls intensively. They became one of the most valuable resources of the incipient Spanish Empire in the Americas between 1508 and 1531, by which time the local indigenous population and the pearl oysters had been devastated.[17]

Spanish colonization of mainland Venezuela started in 1502. Spain established its first permanent South American settlement in the what became the city of Cumaná. At the time indigenous people lived mainly in groups as agriculturists and hunters – along the coast, in the Andean mountain range, and along the Orinoco River.

Klein-Venedig (Little Venice) was the most significant part of the German colonization of the Americas, from 1528 to 1546, in which the Welser banking family of Augsburg obtained colonial rights in Venezuela Province in return for debts owed by Charles I of Spain. The primary motivation was the search for the legendary golden city of El Dorado. The venture based in Santa Ana de Coro, was initially led by Ambrosius Ehinger, who founded Maracaibo in 1529. After the deaths of first Ehinger (1533) and then his successor Nikolaus Federmann, Georg von Speyer (1540), Philipp von Hutten continued exploration in the interior, and in his absence from the capital of the province the crown of Spain claimed the right to appoint the governor. On Hutten's return to the capital, in 1546, the Spanish governor Juan de Carvajal had Hutten and Bartholomeus Welser executed. Subsequently, Charles I revoked Welser's charter.

By the middle of the 16th century, not many more than 2,000 Europeans lived in the region that became Venezuela. The opening of gold mines in 1632 at Yaracuy led to the introduction of slavery, at first involving the indigenous population, then imported Africans. The first real economic success of the colony involved the raising of livestock and tobacco, much helped by the grassy plains known as llanos. The society that developed as a result – a handful of Spanish landowners and widely dispersed native herdsmen on Spanish-introduced horses – recalls primitive feudalism, certainly a powerful concept in the 16th-century Spanish imagination that (perhaps more fruitfully) bears comparison in economic terms with the latifundia of antiquity.

The western tip of the Araya Peninsula was knowed for its large, purple-colored natural salt pans, which became the new world major site of salt mining during the colonial era.[18] In the late 16th and early 17th centuries, the region was regularly mined for salt by Dutch smugglers, who reportedly numbered one hundred ships annually. The smuggling industry in the region was temporarily stymied by a Spanish punitive expedition sent in 1605, although it soon recovered. Eventually, in 1618, Spanish forces began constructing the fortress El Castillo de Santiago de Araya to guard the peninsula. When it was completed in 1665, the fortress permanently put an end to Dutch incursions.[19][20]

During the 16th and 17th centuries, the cities that constitute today's Venezuela suffered relative neglect. The Viceroyalties of New Spain and Peru (located on the sites that had been occupied by the capital cities of the Aztecs and Incas, respectively) showed more interest in their nearby gold and silver mines than in the remote agricultural societies of Venezuela. Responsibility for the Venezuelan territories shifted to and between the two viceroyalties.

In the 18th century, a second Venezuelan society formed along the coast with the establishment of cocoa, sugar cane and indigo plantations manned by much larger importations of African slaves. Quite a number of black slaves also worked in the haciendas of the grassy llanos. Most of the Amerindians who still survived had perforce migrated to the plains and jungles to the south, where only Spanish friars took an interest in them – especially the Franciscans or Capucins, who compiled grammars and small lexicons for some of their languages. The friar founded several misións (the name for an area of friar activity) in the Guayana Region where friars founding several missions and developed an agricultural emporium based on livestock and cotton cultivation.

The Province of Venezuela came under the jurisdiction of the Viceroyalty of New Granada (established in 1717). The Real Compañía Guipuzcoana de Caracas was created in 1728 by the King Phillip V to held a close monopoly on trade with Europe. Since 1730 it stimulated the Venezuelan economy, especially in fostering the cultivation of cacao beans, which became Venezuela's principal export.[21] It opened Venezuelan ports to foreign commerce, but this recognized a fait accompli. Like no other Spanish American dependency, Venezuela had more contacts with Europe through the British, Dutch and French islands in the Caribbean. In an almost surreptitious, though legal, manner, Caracas had become an intellectual powerhouse. From 1721, it had its own university, which taught Latin, medicine, and engineering, apart from the humanities.

José Gumilla, a Jesuit priest, is credited with introducing coffee into Venezuela, in 1732.[22] In Venezuela, known as the land of plantations dependent on slave labour, cocoa became the major crop in the 1770s, overshadowing tobacco and sugar cane. The Province of Venezuela became the Captaincy General of Venezuela in 1777. From 1793, there were many large coffee plantations in the country.[23] By the beginning of the 18th century, the crops of sugar cane and the assembly of mills and factories were scattered in Caracas, Guanare, Trujillo, Trinidad island, Carora, El Tocuyo, Mérida, Barquisimeto, Turmero, La Victoria, Boconó and San Cristóbal. The most prominent sugarcane areas of the time were: Cumaná, Cumanacoa, Carúpano and Río Caribe, which had optimal lands to extend the cultivation of the cane, however there were no less important ones such as La Grita, Bailadores, El Tocuyo, Trujillo, Ejido, Lagunillas, Barinas , small towns like Mesa del Llano, Chiguará, among others. At the end of that century, in the Province of Venezuela, 348 sugar mills were stocked, which supplied melao to numerous people who kept taking sugarcane spirits, used as a drink and medicine. On February 18, 1797, a Royal Navy fleet of 18 warships under the command of Sir Ralph Abercromby invaded and took the Island of Trinidad. Within a few days the last Spanish Governor, Don José María Chacón surrendered the island to Abercromby.

It was only in the 1810 when coffee became the major plantation crop. By the 1830s, Venezuela was the third largest coffee exporter in the world. The war of independence in the country also resulted in decline of growth of cacao due to neglect and destruction. However, growth of coffee took a rising trend as its prices in the North Atlantic nations was booming and Venezuela had free trade agreement with these nations.[24] The town of El Callao has been a gold-mining centre since 1853, following the discovery of the metal in that year, allowed that many workers from the british and french caribbean islands came to the town. In 1854, a U.S. captain discovered the abundant quantities of guano on Isla de Aves and systematic mining started not long after. Both the Dutch and Venezuelan authorities found out and protested. The Dutch sent a warship to the island. Its captain found Americans loading guano. He informed them that the Dutch considered Aves to belong to the Netherlands Kingdom. After the Federal War (1859-1863) the Dutch authorities on Curaçao, sat down with the Venezuelans and together decided to find a mutually acceptable sovereign to decide about the ownership of Aves Island. The Queen Isabella II of Spain was accepted by both parties, and in 1865 ruled on the issue, deciding in favor of the Venezuelans acknowledged the time honored rights of the dutch colonies of Saba and Sant Eustaquio to fish in the waters around Aves.

During the presidency of the general Antonio Guzmán Blanco, known by the epithet “Illustrious American”, Venezuela witnessed all round development (development of Caracas is largely attributed to him) and coffee production increased rapidly as there was an additional support in the form of loans from foreign countries.Vorlage:Sfn. He stabilized the public debt, encouraged the construction of railroads and roads, promoted the free education and restricted ecclesiastical privileges.

While Venezuelan politicians sought unsuccessfully to entice European farmers to the coffee frontier, Andean peasants and others from Colombia spontaneously colonized extensive areas of the mid-slopes suitable for coffee harvest. In 1878 the Aves island was again occupied by American guano miners until supplies were exhausted in 1912. In 1883 the government of Venezuela signed a contract with Americans Horacio R. Hamilton and Jorge A. Phillips who received concessions for 25 years to mine the asphalt of lake Guanoco the major of the world.[25][26] This concession caused some debate as the profits went to foreign companies. By 1885 Venezuela was the world’s nation leading producer of gold. The mine El Callao, at that time was one of the richest in the world, and the goldfields as a whole saw over a million ounces exported between 1860 and 1883.[27] The gold mining was dominated by immigrants from the British Isles and the British West Indies, giving an appearance of almost creating a British colony on Venezuelan territory.[27]In October 1886, Britain declared the Schomburgk Line to be the provisional frontier of British Guiana near of Venezuelan goldfields but far west of the original boundary of Essequibo river. In February 1887, Venezuela severed diplomatic relations with United Kingdom[28] Proposals for a renewal of relations and settlement of the dispute failed repeatedly, and by summer 1894, diplomatic relations had been severed for seven years.[28] In addition, both sides had established police or military stations at key points in the area, partly to defend claims to the Caratal goldfield of the Yuruari basin, which was within Venezuelan territory but claimed by the British.Vorlage:Citation needed In 1890 the asphalt mining of Lake Guanoco started by the New York & Bermúdez Company, a subsidiary of General Asphalt based in New York. The product used in the manufacturing and road surfacing industries was exported to the United States and Brasil.

In 1894 the venezuelan coffee production peaked to 106 338 tonnes and as export country were second only to Brazil. Coffee grown in Venezuela was largely consumed by locals and the rest was sold mainly to the United States, Belgium, Italy and Germany. In 1895 the dispute of the Essequibo territory became a crisis, the key issue became Britain's refusal to include in the proposed international arbitration the territory east of the Schomburgk Line. [29] The crisis ultimately saw Britain accept the United States diplomatic intervention to force arbitration of the entire dispute territory, and tacitly accept the US right to intervene under the Monroe Doctrine. A tribunal convened in Paris by 1898 to decide the matter, and in 1899 awarded the bulk of the disputed territory to British Guiana.[30]By 1899 the first gold rush at El Callao was over and the mines were for long thought to be exhausted. The same year Cipriano Castro successfully attacked Caracas after a blitzkrieg expedition from Colombia boundary to overthrow the regime of Ignacio Andrade. Installed as the supreme military commander and later as president of Venezuela, Castro inaugurated a period of plunder and political disorder. In 1900-1901 the Venezuelan government put higher taxes on the foreign companies; in response these companies supported politically the opposing side of a coalition of regional caudillos under the tycon banker Manuel Antonio Matos with the intention to overthrow Castro. The conflict escalated in 1902 in a civil war named as the " Revolucion Libertadora"[31][25][26] that shook the country and brought the government to the brink of collapse, but after the revolution's defeat suffered in the Siege of La Victory (November 1902), the vast network of armies and its extraordinary power was weakened, being a wound that could not be recovered.

In December 1902 when Castro refused to make payments on foreign debts, British, German, and Italian warships set up a blockade to force payment. The issue was eventually resolved in 1903 through arbitration in Washington promoted by US President Theodore Roosevelt. The revolution succumbing finally in 1903 in the battle of City Bolivar, with which Matos decides to leave Venezuela, establishing itself in Paris. The conflict led to a temporary interruption in the diplomatic relations with the USA between June and December 1908, after Castro had expropriated the New York & Bermudez Company.[32]

In 1908, Juan Vicente Gómez replaced his ailing predecessor, Cipriano Castro, as the president of Venezuela. Over the next few years, Gómez granted several concessions to explore, produce, and refine oil. Most of these oil concessions were granted to his closest friends, and they in turn passed them on to foreign oil companies that could actually develop them.[33] On 15 April 1914, the Caribbean Petroleum Company (filial of Royal Dutch Shell) completed the Zumaque-I oil well and was discovered the first Venezuelan oilfield of importance, Mene Grande in the Maracaibo Basin.[34] This major discovery encouraged a massive wave of foreign oil companies to Venezuela in an attempt to get a piece of the action.

From 1914 to 1917, several more oil fields were discovered across the country including the emblematic Bolivar Coastal Field; however World War I slowed significant development of the industry. In the Andean frontier region coffee production had increased ten times (between 1830 and 1930) making it the second largest coffee producing nation in the world. More than 82,000 tonnes of coffee were produced in 1919; however, poor agricultural practices, soil erosion, less incidence of rainfall and over use of soil strength caused a drastic decline in the yield, in the 1920s, which resulted in the decline of the coffee industry in the country; petroleum extraction compounded its downfall.

1922–1959

All that changed on December 14, 1922, when Shell drilled Los Barrosos II beneath Cabimas at the Lake Maracaibo basin, a blowout spouting wildly at the rate of 100,000 barrels a day. The president Juan Vicente Gómez allowed that many oil companies and workers from other parts of Venezuela and abroad came to Cabimas, increasing its population. Most foreign personnel were of American or Dutch origin.[35] Gomez brought about the end of civil wars by exerting power over regional caudillos and, as a result, Venezuela became a peaceful country and would remain so for decades.[36] Ironically, the elimination of the caudillo problem and the choosing of Eleazar López Contreras as his last minister of war and marine paved the way to the emergence of modern democracy; see Generation of 1928. Gómez managed to deflate Venezuela's staggering debt by granting concessions to foreign oil companies, which won him the support of the United States and the European powers. He repaid all foreign and internal debt using excess reserves from oil and coffee revenous; his fiscal conservatism helped the country get through the Crash of 1929 and led to an increase in the value of the bolívar to the point of becoming hard currency.[36] In just ten years, from 1920 to 1930, Venezuela became the world ́s leading oil exporter, remaining so for four decades, the oil sector rose from 2.5% of gross domestic product to almost 40%, with agriculture falling from 39% to 12.2%. The Great Depression caused the fall of coffee prices, prompting most countries in the region to devalue their currency to maintain the competitiveness of their exports. Venezuela, on the contrary, gives in to pressure from the trade lobby and organizes the importation of everything the country consumes. Between 1929 and 1938, Caracas raised the value of the Bolivar by 64%, closing the doors of international trade to the agricultural sector. Venezuela has thus moved from a 96% economy based on cocoa and coffee to an oil economy. Previously in 1934 the commercial mining of the asphalt in Guanoco lake stopped and has not been re-established since.[37][26][32]The beginning of World War II in 1939 and the increase in oil demand (internationally) placed Venezuela in the third largest producer of crude oil, in the world, and in the first exporter, of those years (1939-1945). Petroleum revenues declined sharply in 1941–42 because of War transportation squeeze, and President Medina used a 1943 oil law to transform the Gomecist oil concessions regime into new concessions for 40 years based on tougher fiscal terms and more government control raise the nation’s share to 43 % of profits from the petroleum industry. As the transportation shortage eased, his government granted new concessions and stimulated a petroleum boom. At that time Venezuela was the Allies' top oil supplier during the war occurring in the European continent. In 1945, after a coup d'état brought to power a left-leaning government of Romulo Betancourt and election of president Romulo Gallegos the oil companies accepted a reform of 1943 law based on the 50 % share profit principle with no concessions, described as "a landmark event",[38] which was subsequently replicated in several producing countries as Saudi Arabia. Nevertheless, army officers Carlos Delgado Chalbaud, Marcos Pérez Jiménez and Luis Felipe Llovera Páez, threw him out of power November in the 1948 Venezuelan coup d'état.

During Pérez Jiménez dictatorship from 1952 to 1958, Venezuela enjoyed remarkably high GDP growth, so that in the late 1950s Venezuela's real GDP per capita almost reached that of West Germany. The continuous growth of oil and manufacture industries during that period attracted many European immigrants.

In 1950, Venezuela was the world's 4th wealthiest nation per capita.[39] From the 1950s to the early 1980s, the Venezuelan economy, which was buoyed by high oil prices, was one of the strongest and most prosperous in South America.

However after fraudulent plebiscite of December of 1957 the 23 January 1958, the dictator Pérez Jiménez was overthrown. A transition government was established under Rear Admiral Wolfgang Larrazábal and then Edgar Sanabria. During the interim presidency Sanabria implemented the Supplementary Tax Law through which the tax rate is raised to oil companies from 50 to 60% and the December 1958 general elections saw Democratic Action candidate Rómulo Betancourt elected as new president. Take office on 13 February 1959, Betancourt inherited an enormous internal and external debt caused by rampant public spending during the dictatorship. Nevertheless, he managed to balance Venezuela's public budget and initiate an unsuccessful agrarian reform.[40]

After the Eisenhower Administration decreed oil import quotas to protect U.S. domestic producers from cheap Middle East oil, a world glut quickly developed that forced Venezuela to sell its oil at $1.40 a barrel in 1959, when a similar volume of mineral water was selling for $5. The oil glut led Juan Pablo Pérez Alfonzo, Venezuelan petroleum minister, to travel among the producing countries of the Middle East and North Africa to form an international oil cartel, that would become OPEC.[41] In 1973, Venezuela voted to nationalize its oil industry outright, effective 1 January 1976, with Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) presiding over a number of holding companies. In subsequent years, Venezuela built a vast refining and marketing system in the United States and Europe.[42]

1960s–1990s

Buoyed by a strong oil sector in the 1960s and 1970s, Venezuela's governments were able to maintain social harmony by spending fairly large amounts on public programs including health care, education, transport and food subsidies. Literacy and welfare programs benefited tremendously from these conditions.[43] Because of the oil wealth, Venezuelan workers "enjoyed the highest wages in Latin America".[44] This situation was reversed when oil prices collapsed during the 1980s.

When world oil prices collapsed in the 1980s, the economy contracted and inflation levels (consumer price inflation) rose, remaining between 6 and 12% from 1982 to 1986.[45][46] The inflation rate peaked in 1989 at 84%,[46] the year the capital city of Caracas suffered from rioting during the Caracazo following the cut of government spending and the opening of markets by President Carlos Andrés Pérez.[47] After Pérez initiated such liberal economic policies and made Venezuelan markets more free, Venezuela's GDP went from a −8.3% decline in 1989 to growing 4.4% in 1990 and 9.2% in 1991, though wages remained low and unemployment was high among Venezuelans.[47]

Some state that neoliberalism was the cause of Venezuelan economic difficulties, though overreliance on oil prices and a fractured political system without parties agreeing on policies caused many of the problems.[48] By the mid-1990s, Venezuela under President Rafael Caldera saw annual inflation rates of 50–60% from 1993 to 1997 with an exceptional peak in 1996 at 100%.[46] The percentage of people living in poverty rose from 36% in 1984 to 66% in 1995,[49] with the country suffering a severe banking crisis (Venezuelan banking crisis of 1994). In 1998, the economic crisis had grown even worse. Per capita GDP was at the same level as 1963 (after adjusting 1963 dollar to 1998 value), down a third from its 1978 peak; and the purchasing power of the average salary was a third of its 1978 level.[50]

1999–2013

Hugo Chávez was elected President in December 1998 and took office in February 1999. In 2000, oil prices soared, offering Chávez funds not seen since Venezuela's economic collapse in the 1980s.[45] Chávez then used economic policies that were more social democratic than those of his predecessors, using populist approaches with oil funds that made Venezuela's economy dependent on high oil prices.[45] Chávez also played a leading role within OPEC to reinvigorate the organization and obtain members' adherence to lower quotas designed to drive up the oil price. Alí Rodríguez Araque, the Venezuelan oil minister, gave an announcement in 1999 that his country would respect OPEC production quotas, which marked "a historic turnaround from the nation's traditional pro-US oil policy".[51]

In the first four years of the Chávez presidency, the economy grew at first (1999–2001), then contracted from 2001–2003 to GDP levels similar to 1997. At first, the economic decline was due to low oil prices, but it was fueled by the turmoil of the 2002 coup attempt and the 2002–2003 business strike. Other factors of the decline were an exodus of capital from the country and a reluctance of foreign investors. GDP was 50.0 trillion bolivares in 1998. At the bottom of the recession in 2003, it was 42.4 trillion bolivares (in constant 1998 bolivares).[52] However, GDP rebounded 50.1 trillion bolivares with a calmer political situation in 2004 and rose to 66.1 trillion bolivares in 2007 (both in constant 1998 bolivares).[53]

The government sought international assistance to finance reconstruction after massive flooding and landslides in December 1999 caused an estimated US$15 billion to $20 billion in damage.Vorlage:Citation needed

The hardest hit sectors in the worst recession years (2002–2003) were construction (−55.9%), petroleum (−26.5%), commerce (−23.6%) and manufacturing (−22.5%). The drop in the petroleum sector was caused by adherence to the OPEC quota established in 2002 and the virtual cessation of exports during the PdVSA-led general strike of 2002–2003. The non-petroleum sector of the economy contracted by 6.5% in 2002. The bolivar, which had been suffering from serious inflation and devaluation relative to international standards since the late 1980s,[54] continued to weaken.

The inflation rate as measured by consumer price index was 35.8% in 1998, falling to a low of 12.5% in 2001 and rising to 31.1% in 2003. Historically, the highest yearly inflation was 100% in 1996. In an attempt to support the bolivar, bolster the government's declining level of international reserves and mitigate the adverse impact from the oil industry work stoppage on the financial system, the Ministry of Finance and the central bank suspended foreign exchange trading on 23 January 2003. On 6 February, the government created CADIVI, a currency control board charged with handling foreign exchange procedures. The board set the US$ exchange rate at 1,596 bolivares to the dollar for purchases and 1,600 to the dollar for sales.

The housing market in Venezuela shrunk significantly with developers avoiding Venezuela due to the massive number of companies who have had their property expropriated by the government.[55] According to The Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal, Venezuela had the weakest property rights in the world, scoring only 5.0 on a scale of 100, with expropriation without compensation being common.[56] The shortage of housing is so significant that in 2007 a group of squatters occupied Centro Financiero Confinanzas, a cancelled economic center that was supposed to symbolize Venezuela's growing economy.[57]

The Venezuelan economy shrank 5.8% in the first three months of 2010 compared to the same period of 2009[58] and had the highest inflation rate in Latin America at 30.5%.[58] President Chávez expressed optimism that Venezuela would emerge from recession[58] despite the International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecasts showing that Venezuela would be the only country in the region to remain in recession that year.[59] The IMF qualified the economic recovery of Venezuela as "delayed and weak" in comparison with other countries of the region.[60] Following Chavez's death in early 2013, Venezuela's economy continued to fall into an even greater recession.

2013–present

Shortages in Venezuela leave store shelves empty

According to the misery index in 2013, Venezuela ranked as the top spot globally with the highest misery index score.[61][62] The International Finance Corporation ranked Venezuela one of the lowest countries for doing business with, ranking it 180 of 185 countries for its Doing Business 2013 report with protecting investors and taxes being its worst rankings.[63][64] In early 2013, the bolívar fuerte was devalued due to growing shortages in Venezuela.[65] The shortages included necessities such as toilet paper, milk and flour.[66] Shortages also affected healthcare in Venezuela, with the University of Caracas Medical Hospital ceasing to perform surgeries due to the lack of supplies in 2014.[67] The Bolivarian government's policies also made it difficult to import drugs and other medical supplies.[68] Due to such complications, many Venezuelans died avoidable deaths with medical professionals having to use limited resources using methods that were replaced decades ago.[69][70]

An opposition protester during the 2014 Venezuelan protests holding a sign saying: "I protest for the scarcity. Where can we get these?"

In 2014, Venezuela entered an economic recession having its GDP growth decline to −3.0%.[71] Venezuela was placed at the top of the misery index for the second year in a row.[72] The Economist said Venezuela was "[p]robably the world’s worst-managed economy".[73] Citibank believed that "the economy has little prospect of improvement" and that the state of the Venezuelan economy was a "disaster".[74] The Doing Business 2014 report by the International Finance Corporation and the World Bank ranked Venezuela one score lower than the previous year, then 181 out of 185.[75] The Heritage Foundation ranked Venezuela 175th out of 178 countries in economic freedom for 2014, classifying it as a "repressed" economy according to the principles the foundation advocates.[76][77] According to Foreign Policy, Venezuela was ranked last in the world on its Base Yield Index due to low returns that investors receive when investing in Venezuela.[78] In a 2014 report titled Scariest Places on the Business Frontiers by Zurich Financial Services and reported by Bloomberg, Venezuela was ranked as the riskiest emerging market in the world.[79] Many companies such as Toyota, Ford Motor Co., General Motors Company, Air Canada, Air Europa, American Airlines, Copa Airlines, TAME, TAP Airlines and United Airlines slowed or stopped operation due to the lack of hard currency in the country,[80][81][82][83][84] with Venezuela owing such foreign companies billions of dollars.[85] Venezuela also dismantled CADIVI, a government body in charge of currency exchange. CADIVI was known for holding money from the private sector and was suspected to be corrupt.[86]

Venezuela again topped the misery index according to the World Bank in 2015.[87][88] The IMF predicted in October 2015 an inflation rate of 159% for the year 2015—the highest rate in Venezuelan history and the highest rate in the world—and that the economy would contract by 10%.[11][89] According to leaked documents from the Central Bank of Venezuela, the country ended 2015 with an inflation rate of 270% and a shortage rate of goods over 70%.[90][91]

Venezuelans eating from garbage in late 2015

President Nicolás Maduro reorganized his economic cabinet in 2016 with the group mainly consisting of leftist Venezuelan academics.[92] According to Bank of America's investment division Merrill Lynch, Maduro's new cabinet was expected to tighten currency and price controls in the country.[92] Alejandro Werner, the head of IMF's Latin American Department, stated that 2015 figures released by the Central Bank of Venezuela were not accurate and that Venezuela's inflation for 2015 was 275%. Other forecast inflation figures by IMF and Bank of America were 720%[93][94] and 1,000% in 2016,[95][96] Analysts believed that the Venezuelan government has been manipulating economic statistics, especially since they did not report adequate data since late 2014.[95] According to economist Steve Hanke of Johns Hopkins University, the Central Bank of Venezuela delayed the release of statistics and lied about figures much like the Soviet Union did, with Hanke saying that a lie coefficient had to be used to observe Venezuela's economic data.[97]

By 2016, media outlets said that Venezuela was suffering an economic collapse[98][99] with the IMF saying that it expected it to reach a 500% inflation rate and 10% contraction in the GDP.[100] In December 2016, monthly inflation exceeded 50 percent for the 30th consecutive day, meaning the Venezuelan economy was officially experiencing hyperinflation, making it the 57th country to be added to the Hanke-Krus World Hyperinflation Table.[101]

On 25 August 2017, it was reported that new United States sanctions against Venezuela did not ban trading of the country's existing non-government bonds, with the sanctions instead including restrictions intended to block the government's ability to fund itself.[102]

On 26 January 2018, the government ended the protected, subsidized fixed exchange rate mechanism that was highly overvalued as a result of rampant inflation.[103] The National Assembly (led by the opposition) said inflation in 2017 was over 4,000%, a level other independent economists also agreed with.[104] In February, the government launched an oil backed cryptocurrency called the petro.[105]

Bloomberg's Cafe Con Leche Index calculated the price increase for a cup of coffee to have increased by 718% in the 12 weeks before 18 January 2018, an annualized inflation rate of 448,000%.[106] The finance commission of the National Assembly noted in July 2018 that prices were doubling every 28 days with an annualized inflation rate of 25,000%.[107]

The country was heading for a selective default in 2017.[108] In early 2018, the country was in default, meaning it could not pay its lenders.[109]

August 24, 2017 President Trump imposed sanctions on the state debt of Venezuela which ban to make transactions with state debt of Venezuela including the participation in debt restructuring. November 13, 2017 the technical default period ended and Venezuela didn't pay coupons on its dollar eurobonds. This caused a cross default on other dollar bonds. November 30 ISDA committee consisting of 15 biggest banks admitted default on state debt obligations what in its turn entailed payments on CDS.[110]

According to Cbonds, nowadays there are 20 international Venezuelan bonds which are recognized in default. The overall amount of defaulted obligations is equal to 36 billion dollars.[111]

Sectors

Under the tenures of Hugo Chávez and his successor Nicolás Maduro, many businesses abandoned Venezuela. In 1999, there were 13,000 companies in the country. By 2016, less than a third of companies remained in Venezuela, with only 4,000 companies operating in the nation.[112]

Petroleum and other resources

Vorlage:See also

A map of world oil reserves according to OPEC, 2013.

Venezuela has the world's largest proven oil reserves, totaling 302,81 billion barrels at the end of 2017.[113] The country is a major producer of petroleum products, which remain the keystone of the Venezuelan economy. The International Energy Agency shows how Venezuela's oil production has fallen in the last years, producing only Vorlage:Convert daily, down from 3.5 million in 1998. However, the oil incomes will double its value in local currency with the recent currency devaluation.[114] Venezuela has large energy subsidies. In 2015, the cost of petrol was just US$0.06 per gallon, costing 23% of government revenues.[115] In February 2016, the government finally decided to raise the price, but only to 6 bolivar (about 60¢ at the official rate of exchange) per litre for premium and just 1 bolivar (10¢) for lower-grade petrol.[116][117]

A range of other natural resources, including iron ore, coal, bauxite, gold, nickel and diamonds, are in various stages of development and production. In April 2000, Venezuela's president decreed a new mining law and regulations were adopted to encourage greater private sector participation in mineral extraction. During Venezuela's economic crisis, the rate of gold excavated fell 64.1% between February 2013 and February 2014 and iron production dropped 49.8%.[118]

Venezuela mostly utilizes hydropower resources to supply power to the nation's industries, accounting for 57% of total consumption at the end of 2016.[119] However, persistent drought has severely reduced energy production from hydropower resources.[120] The national electricity law is designed to provide a legal framework and to encourage competition and new investment in the sector.Vorlage:Citation needed After a two-year delay, the government is proceeding with plans to privatize the various state-owned electricity systems under a different scheme than previously envisioned.Vorlage:Citation needed

Manufacturing

Vorlage:Expand section Manufacturing contributed 12% of GDP in 2014.[121] The manufacturing sector is experiencing severe difficulties, amidst lack of investment and accusations of mismanagement.[122][123] Venezuela manufactures and exports steel, aluminum, transport equipment, textiles, apparel, beverages and foodstuffs. It produces cement, tires, paper, fertilizer and assembles cars both for domestic and export markets.

In 2014, General Motors Venezolana stopped automotive production after 65 years of service due to a lack of supplies[124][125] while the Central Bank of Venezuela announced that the shortage rate of new automobiles was at 100%.[126] By the first half of 2016, only 10 vehicles were manufactured per day in Venezuela with production dropping 86%.[127]

In 2017, estimates showed that Venezuela's industrial production fell about 2%.[6]

Agriculture

Agriculture in Venezuela accounts for approximately 3% of GDP, 10% of the labor force, and at least a quarter of Venezuela's land area. Venezuela exports rice, corn, fish, tropical fruit, coffee, beef and pork. The country is not self-sufficient in most areas of agriculture. Venezuela imports about two-thirds of its food needs. In 2002, American firms exported $347 million worth of agricultural products, including wheat, corn, soybeans, soybean meal, cotton, animal fats, vegetable oils and other items to make Venezuela one of the top two American markets in South America. The United States supplies more than one-third of Venezuela's food imports. Recent government policies have led to problems with food shortages.[7]

Trade

Venezuela private sector nonpetroleum exports in millions of US$ from 1997 to 2015 (orange=goods, yellow=services)[128]

Venezuela is a founding member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), the Organization of Gas Exporting Countries (GECF), the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA) and the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC).[129] Petroleum constitutes 80% of Venezuela's exports with a value of $22.2 billion in 2017.[130] Thanks to petroleum exports, Venezuela usually posts a trade surplus. From 2005, nontraditional (i.e. nonpetroleum) private sector exports have been declining rapidly. By 2015, they constitute 8% of total exports.[128] The United States is Venezuela's leading trade partner.[131] During 2002, the United States exported $4.4 billion in goods to Venezuela, making it the 25th-largest market for the United States Including petroleum products, Venezuela exported $15.1 billion in goods to the United States, making it its 14th-largest source of goods. Venezuela opposes the proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas.

Since 1998, China–Venezuela relations have seen an increasing partnership between the government of the Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez and the People's Republic of China. Sino-Venezuelan trade was less than $500m per year before 1999 and reached $7.5bn in 2009, making China Venezuela's second-largest trade partner[132] and Venezuela China's biggest investment destination in Latin America. Various bilateral deals have seen China invest billions in Venezuela and Venezuela increase exports of oil and other resources to China. China has demanded payment in oil for its exports to Venezuela because of its unwillingness to accept Venezuelan currency and the inability of Venezuela to pay in dollars or gold.

Labor

Vorlage:Expand section Under Chávez, Venezuela has also instituted worker-run "co-management" initiatives in which workers' councils play a key role in the management of a plant or factory. In experimental co-managed enterprises, such as the state-owned Alcasa factory, workers develop budgets and elect both managers and departmental delegates who work together with company executives on technical issues related to production.[133]

In November 2010, workers spent a week protesting outside factories in Valera and Valencia following the expropriation of the American bottle-maker Owens-Illinois.[134]

Labor disputes have continued to increase since the financial crisis in 2008. According to the World Economic Forum, Venezuela is ranked as 134th of the 148 countries for economic competitiveness. Many in the private sector attribute these findings to the inflexible labor market.

In recent years, a barrage of pro-worker decrees have been passed. The most significant could be the 2012 labor laws known as the LOTTT. These laws included the virtual ban on dismissal, shorter work week, improved holidays and enhanced maternity benefits. The LOTTT offers job security to most workers after the first month. Employers have reported an absenteeism rate of up to 40% which they blame on the leniency of these labor laws. As expected, employers have been less willing to recruit.[135]

On 17 November 2014, President Maduro issued a decree to increase the minimum salary for all workers by 15%. The decree became effective on 1 December 2014.[136] As part of the May Day celebrations in honor of workers' day, President Maduro announced on 28 April 2015 that the minimum wage would increase 30%; 20% in May and 10% in July, with the newly announced minimum wage for Venezuelans being only about $30 per month at the widely used black market rate.[137]

In September 2017, the National Union of Workers (UNETE) announced that Venezuela had lost 3,345,000 jobs since the election of President Maduro.[138] By December 2017, the number of lost jobs increased by 400,000 to over 3,850,000 lost jobs since the start of Maduro's tenure.[139]

Infrastructure

In the 20th century when Venezuela benefitted from oil sales, infrastructure flourished in Venezuela.[45] However, in recent years Venezuela's public services and infrastructure has suffered, especially utilities such as electricity and water.[45][140]

Transportation

Venezuela has an extensive road system that was initially created in the 1960s helped aid the oil and aluminum industries.[45] The capital Caracas had a modern subway system designed by the French that was finished in 1995, with the subway tunneling more than 31.6 mi (51 km).[45]

In 1870, Antonio Guzmán Blanco helped create Venezuela's railway system.[45]

The Chavez government launched a National Railway Development Plan designed to create 15 railway lines across the country, with Vorlage:Convert of track by 2030. The network is being built in cooperation with China Railways, which is also cooperating with Venezuela to create factories for tracks, railway cars and eventually locomotives. However, Venezuela's rail project is being put on hold due to Venezuela not being able to pay the $7.5 billion and owing China Railway nearly $500 million.[141]

Lufthansa said it would stop all flights to Venezuela on 18 June 2016, citing difficulties with currency controls.[142] Other airlines also cut back on flights and required that passengers pay fares in US$.[142]

Energy

The Venezuelan electrical grid is plagued with occasional blackouts in various districts of the country. In 2011, it had so many problems that rations on electricity were put in place to help ease blackouts.[140] On 3 September 2013, 70% of the country plunged into darkness with 14 of 23 states of Venezuela stating they did not have electricity for most of the day.[143] Another power outage on 2 December 2013 left most of Venezuela in the dark again and happened just days before elections.[144]

Energy statistics

  • Electricity – production by source:
    • Fossil fuel: 35.7% (2012 est.)
    • Hydroelectric 64.3 (2012 est.)
    • Nuclear: 0% (2012 est.)
    • Other: 0% (2012 est.)
  • Electricity production: 127.6 billion kWh (2012 est.)
  • Electricity – consumption: 85.05 billion kWh (2011 est.)
  • Electricity – exports: 633 million kWh (2009 est.)
  • Electricity – imports: 260 million kWh (2009 est.)
  • Electricity – installed generating capacity: 27.5 million kW (2012 est.)

Statistics

Economy data

The blue line represents annual rates whereas the red line represents trends of annual rates given throughout the period shown (sources: International Monetary Fund, World Bank and Central Intelligence Agency)

The Macroeconomic Stabilization Fund (FIEM) decreased from US$2.59 billion in January 2003 to US$700 million in October, but central bank-held international reserves actually increased from US$11.31 billion in January to US$19.67 billion in October 2003. On the black market, the bolívar fell 28% in 2007 to Bs. 4,750 per US$[145] and declined to around VEF 5.5 (Bs 5500) per US$ in early 2009.[146]

The economy recovered and grew by 16.8% in 2004. This growth occurred across a wide range of sectors—the oil industry directly provides only a small percentage of employment in the country. International reserves grew to US$27 billion. Polling firm Datanalysis noted that real income in the poorest sectors of society grew by 33% in 2004.Vorlage:Citation needed

On 7 March 2007, the government announced that the Venezuelan bolívar would be redenominated at a ratio of 1 to 1,000 at the beginning of 2008 and renamed the bolívar fuerte ("strong bolivar") to ease accounting and transactions. This was carried out on 1 January 2008, at which time the exchange rate was 2.15 bolívar fuerte per US$.[147] The ISO 4217 code for the bolívar fuerte is VEF.

Government spending as a percentage of GDP in Venezuela in 2007 was 30%, smaller than other mixed economies such as France (49%) and Sweden (52%).[148] According to official sources from the United Nations, the percentage of people below the national poverty line has decreased during the presidency of Hugo Chávez, from 48.1% in 2002 to 28% in 2008.[149][150]

With the 2007 rise in oil prices and rising government expenditures, Venezuela's economy grew by 9% in 2007. Oil prices fell starting in July 2008, resulting in a major loss of income. Hit by a global recession, the economy contracted by 2% in the second quarter of 2009,[151] contracting a further 4.5% in the third quarter of 2009. Chavez's response has been that these standards mis-state economic fact and that the economy should be measured by socialistic standards.[152] On 17 November, the Central Bank reported that private sector activity declined by 4.5% and that inflation was averaging 26.7%. Compounding such problems is a drought which the government says was caused by El Niño, resulting in rationing of water and electricity and a short supply of food.[153]

The year 2010 saw Venezuela still in recession as GDP has fallen by 5.8% in the first quarter of 2010.[154] The Central Bank of Venezuela has stated that the recession is due largely "to restricted access to foreign currency for imports, lower internal demand and electricity rationing". The oil sector's performance was also particularly troubling, with oil GDP shrinking by 5%. More importantly, the Central Bank hints at the root cause of the oil contraction, saying that "the bank said it was due to falls in production, "operative problems", maintenance stoppages and the channeling of diesel to run thermal generators during a power crisis".[154] While the public sector of the economy has fallen 2.8%, the private sector has dropped off 6%.[154]

The year 2013 proved to be difficult for Venezuela as shortages of necessities and extreme inflation attacked the nation's economy. Items became so scarce that nearly one quarter of items were not in stock.[155] The bolívar was devalued to 6.3 per US$ in early 2013 taking one third of its value away.[156] However, inflation still continued to rise drastically in the country to the point President Maduro forced stores to sell their items just days before elections. Maduro said that the stores were charging unreasonable prices even though the owners were only charging so much due to the actual devaluation of the bolivar.[157]

In 2014 The Central Bank of Venezuela stopped releasing statistics for the first time in its history as a way to possibly manipulate the image of the economy.[158] Venezuela has also dismantled CADIVI, a government body in charge of currency exchange.[86]

In May 2019, the Central Bank of Venezuela released economic data for the first time since 2015. According to this release, the inflation of Venezuela was 274% in 2016, 863% in 2017 and 130,060% in 2018.[159] The new reports imply a contraction of more than half of the economy in five years, according to the Financial Times "one of the biggest contractions in Latin American history".[160] According two undisclosed sources from Reuters, the release of this numbers was due to pressure from China, a Maduro ally. One of this sources claims that the disclosure of economic numbers may bring Venezuela into compliance with the IMF, making it harder to support Juan Guaidó during the presidential crisis.[161] At the time, the IMF was not able to support the validity of the data as they had not been able to contact the authorities.[161]

The following table shows the main economic indicators in 1980–2017. Inflation under 5% is in green.[162]

Year GDP
(in bil. US$ PPP)
GDP per capita
(in US$ PPP)
GDP growth
(real)
Inflation rate
(in percent)
Unemployment
(in percent)
Government debt
(in % of GDP))
1980 117.2 7,838 Vorlage:Decrease 4.9% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 21.4% n/a n/a
1981 Vorlage:Increase 126.5 Vorlage:Increase 8,208 Vorlage:Decrease 1.3% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 16.2% n/a n/a
1982 Vorlage:Increase 137.9 Vorlage:Increase 8,690 Vorlage:Increase 2.6% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 9.6% n/a n/a
1983 Vorlage:Decrease 129.2 Vorlage:Decrease 7,919 Vorlage:Decrease 9.9% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 6.2% n/a n/a
1984 Vorlage:Increase 140.8 Vorlage:Increase 8,392 Vorlage:Increase 5.2% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 12.3% n/a n/a
1985 Vorlage:Increase 146.5 Vorlage:Increase 8,499 Vorlage:Increase 0.9% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 11.4% n/a n/a
1986 Vorlage:Increase 158.6 Vorlage:Increase 9,088 Vorlage:Increase 6.1% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 11.5% n/a n/a
1987 Vorlage:Increase 170.4 Vorlage:Increase 9,528 Vorlage:Increase 4.8% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 28.1% n/a n/a
1988 Vorlage:Increase 187.9 Vorlage:Increase 10,247 Vorlage:Increase 6.5% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 29.5% n/a n/a
1989 Vorlage:Decrease 168.0 Vorlage:Decrease 8,945 Vorlage:Decrease 13.9% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 84.5% n/a n/a
1990 Vorlage:Increase 185.5 Vorlage:Increase 9,557 Vorlage:Increase 6.5% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 40.7% n/a n/a
1991 Vorlage:Increase 210.3 Vorlage:Increase 10,581 Vorlage:Increase 9.8% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 34.2% n/a n/a
1992 Vorlage:Increase 228.2 Vorlage:Increase 11,214 Vorlage:Increase 6.1% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 31.4% n/a n/a
1993 Vorlage:Increase 234.2 Vorlage:Increase 11,253 Vorlage:Increase 0.3% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 38.1% n/a n/a
1994 Vorlage:Decrease 233.6 Vorlage:Decrease 10,976 Vorlage:Decrease 2.3% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 60.8% n/a n/a
1995 Vorlage:Increase 247.9 Vorlage:Increase 11,397 Vorlage:Increase 4.0% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 59.9% n/a n/a
1996 Vorlage:Increase 251.9 Vorlage:Decrease 11,338 Vorlage:Decrease 0.2% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 99.9% n/a n/a
1997 Vorlage:Increase 272.6 Vorlage:Increase 12,020 Vorlage:Increase 6.4% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 50.0% n/a n/a
1998 Vorlage:Increase 276.3 Vorlage:Decrease 11,946 Vorlage:Increase 0.3% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 35.8% n/a 31.4 %
1999 Vorlage:Decrease 263.8 Vorlage:Decrease 11,182 Vorlage:Decrease 6.0% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 23.6% 14.5 % Vorlage:DecreasePositive 31.2%
2000 Vorlage:Increase 279.8 Vorlage:Increase 11,468 Vorlage:Increase 3.7% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 16.2% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 14.0% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 28.2%
2001 Vorlage:Increase 295.8 Vorlage:Increase 11,928 Vorlage:Increase 3.4% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 12.5% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 13.4% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 31.7%
2002 Vorlage:Decrease 273.8 Vorlage:Decrease 10,859 Vorlage:Decrease 8.9% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 22.4% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 16.0% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 55.0%
2003 Vorlage:Decrease 257.6 Vorlage:Decrease 10,053 Vorlage:Decrease 7.8% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 31.1% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 18.2% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 55.8%
2004 Vorlage:Increase 313.1 Vorlage:Increase 12,026 Vorlage:Increase 18.3% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 21.7% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 15,1 % Vorlage:DecreasePositive 42.2%
2005 Vorlage:Increase 356.7 Vorlage:Increase 13,489 Vorlage:Increase 10.3% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 16.0% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 12.2% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 24.5%
2006 Vorlage:Increase 403.8 Vorlage:Increase 15,034 Vorlage:Increase 9.9% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 13.7% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 10.0% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 16.4%
2007 Vorlage:Increase 450.9 Vorlage:Increase 16,535 Vorlage:Increase 8.8% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 18.7% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 8.5% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 19.1%
2008 Vorlage:Increase 483.9 Vorlage:Increase 17,479 Vorlage:Increase 5.3% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 31.4% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 7.4% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 15.4%
2009 Vorlage:Decrease 472.0 Vorlage:Decrease 16,795 Vorlage:Decrease 3.2% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 26.0% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 7.9% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 18.9%
2010 Vorlage:Decrease 470.4 Vorlage:Decrease 16,493 Vorlage:Decrease 1.5% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 28.2% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 8.5% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 25.0%
2011 Vorlage:Increase 500.3 Vorlage:Increase 17,286 Vorlage:Increase 4.2% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 26.1% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 8.2% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 31.7%
2012 Vorlage:Increase 538.6 Vorlage:Increase 18,342 Vorlage:Increase 5.6% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 21.1% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 7.8% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 30.1%
2013 Vorlage:Increase 555.4 Vorlage:Increase 18,647 Vorlage:Increase 1.3% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 40.6% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 7.5% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 33.3%
2014 Vorlage:Decrease 543.7 Vorlage:Decrease 17,999 Vorlage:Decrease 3.9% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 62.2% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 6.7% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 25.2%
2015 Vorlage:Decrease 515.1 Vorlage:Decrease 16,824 Vorlage:Decrease 6.2% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 121.7% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 7.4% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 11.1%
2016 Vorlage:Decrease 431.8 Vorlage:Decrease 14,059 Vorlage:Decrease 17.0% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 254.9% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 20.6% Vorlage:DecreasePositive 5.1%
2017 Vorlage:Decrease 370.9 Vorlage:Decrease 12,263 Vorlage:Decrease 15.7% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 438.1% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 27.1% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 23.1%
2018 Vorlage:Decrease 311.6 Vorlage:Decrease 10,797 Vorlage:Decrease 18.0% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 65,374.0% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 33.4% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 182.4%
2019 (est.) n/a n/a Vorlage:Decrease 35.0% Vorlage:IncreaseNegative 200,000% n/a n/a

Currency black market

According to DolarToday.com, the value of one US dollar in Venezuelan Bolivares fuertes on the black market through time: blue and red vertical lines represent every time the currency has lost 90% of its value, which has happened seven times since 2012, meaning that the currency is worth (as of mid-February 2019) 30,000,000 times less than in August 2012, since it has lost more than 99.99999% of its value
Inflation represented by the time it would take for money to lose 90% of its value (301-day rolling average, inverted logarithmic scale)

The parallel exchange rate is what Venezuelans believe the Venezuelan currency is worth compared to the US$.[163] In the first few years of Chávez's office, his newly created social programs required large payments in order to make the desired changes. On 5 February 2003, the government created CADIVI, a currency control board charged with handling foreign exchange procedures. Its creation was to control capital flight by placing limits on individuals and only offering them so much of a foreign currency.[164] This limit to foreign currency led to a creation of a currency black market economy since Venezuelan merchants rely on foreign goods that require payments with reliable foreign currencies. As Venezuela printed more money for their social programs, the bolívar continued to devalue for Venezuelan citizens and merchants since the government held the majority of the more reliable currencies.[165]

As of January 2018, the strongest official exchange rate was 1 US$ to 10 VEF while the free market exchange rate was over 200,000 VEF to 1 US$.[89][166] Since merchants can only receive so much necessary foreign currency from the government, they must resort to the black market which in turn raises the merchant's prices on consumers.[167] The high rates in the black market make it difficult for businesses to purchase necessary goods since the government often forces these businesses to make price cuts. This leads to businesses selling their goods and making a low profit, such as Venezuelan McDonald's franchises offering a Big Mac meal for only $1.[168] Since businesses make low profits, this leads to shortages since they are unable to import the goods that Venezuela is reliant on. Venezuela's largest food producing company, Empresas Polar, has stated that they may need to suspend some production for nearly the entire year of 2014 since they owe foreign suppliers $463 million.[169] The last report of shortages in Venezuela showed that 22.4% of necessary goods are not in stock.[170] This was the last report by the government since the central bank no longer posts the scarcity index. This has led to speculation that the government is hiding its inability to control the economy which may create doubt about future economic data released.[171]

Socioeconomic indicators

Vorlage:Outdated section Like most Latin American countries, Venezuela has an unequal distribution of wealth. Although distribution improved when the surplus of rural labor started to diminish and the educational system improved in the middle of the 20th century,[172] equality is far from coinciding with western standards. The rich tend to be very rich and the poor very poor. In 1970, the poorest fifth of the population had 3% of national income while the wealthiest fifth had 54%.[173] For comparison, the United Kingdom 1973 figures were 6.3% and 38.8% and the United States in 1972, 4.5% and 42.8%.[173]

The more recent income distribution data available is for distribution per capita, not per household. The two are not strictly comparable because poor households tend to have more members than rich households, thus the per household data tends to show less inequality than the per capita data. The table below shows the available per capita data for recent years from the World Bank.

Personal income distribution
Year Share of personal income (%) received by: GINI index
Poorest fifth 2nd fifth 3rd fifth 4th fifth Wealthiest fifth Wealthiest 10%
1987 4.7 9.2 14.0 21.5 50.6 34.2 ~43.42
1995 4.3 8.8 13.8 21.3 51.8 35.6 46.8
1996 3.7 8.4 13.6 21.2 53.1 37.0 48.8
2000 4.7 9.4 14.5 22.1 45.4 29.9 42.0
2004 3.5 12.9 54.8 45.59
2007 5.1 14.2 47.7 42.37
2010 5.7 14.9 44.8 38.98
2011 5.7 15.9 44.8 39.02
2013 44.8
2015 46.9

Note that personal (per capita) income distribution, given in this table, is not exactly comparable with household income distribution, given in the previous table, because poor households tend to have more members.

Sources
1987 data: 1991 World Development Report, Table 30, pp. 262–63.
1995 data: 1998 World Development Report, Table 2.8, p. 70.
1996 data: 2000/2001 World Development Report, Table 5, pp. 282–83.
2000 data: 2006 World Development Indicators, Table 2.8.

All of the above publications are by the World Bank.

2004 data: Instituto Nacional de Estadística, p. 8[174]
2007 data: Instituto Nacional de Estadística, p. 8[174]
2010 data: Instituto Nacional de Estadística, p. 8[174]
2011 data: Instituto Nacional de Estadística, p. 8[174]
2013 data: United Nations Development Programme[175]
2015 data: United Nations Development Programme[176]

Poverty in Venezuela increased during the 1980s and early 1990s, but it decreased greatly in the mid to late 1990s. The decreasing trend continued through the Chávez presidency, with the exception of the troubled years 2002 and 2003. Under the Bolivarian government, poverty decreased initially when Venezuela acquired oil funds, though poverty began to increase to its highest level in decades in the 2010s.[177]

The table below shows the percentage of people and the percentage of households whose income is below a poverty line which is equal to the price of a market basket of necessities such as food.[178]

Percentage of people and households with income below national poverty line
Year 1989 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Households 48.1 43.9 42.0 40.4 39.0 48.6 55.1 47.0 37.9 30.6 28.5 27.5 26.7 26.9 26.5 21.1 27.3 48.4 73.0 81.8 87.0
People 31.3 54.5 50.4 48.7 46.3 45.4 55.4 62.1 53.9 43.7 36.3 33.6 32.6 31.8 32.5 31.6 25.4 32.1
Sources
World Bank, 1997 World Development Indicators, p. 52;
Venezuela, Instituto Nacional de Estadística, Pobreza por línea de ingreso, 1er semestre 1997 – 2do semestre 2013. Retrieved December 2014.
ENCOVI – Encuesta sobre Condiciones de Vida en Venezuela Febrero 2018
Note
Datum is from the World Bank and as far as we know is a whole year average (1989)
End of year data provided by Instituto Nacional de Estadística (1997–2013)
ENCOVI used due to lack of government-provided statistics (2014–2017)
Venezuela's extreme poverty rate from 1990 to 2013
Source: INE[179][180]
Note: interim presidents excluded and one-year delay of data transferred during presidential term changes due to new policies, inaugurations and so on
Venezuela economic indicators (2017)[6]
indicator %
Real GDP growth −14.0%
Inflation 1.087.5%
Gross national saving (% of GDP) 12.1%
Foreign trade[6]
Leading markets 2013 % of total Leading suppliers % of total
United States 39.1 United States 31.7
China 14.3 China 16.8
India 12.0 Brazil 9.1
Netherlands Antilles 7.8 Colombia 4.8
Foreign trade[181]
Major exports % of total Major imports % of total
Oil and gas 90.4 Raw materials and intermediate goods 44.5
Other 9.6 Consumer goods 24.5
Capital goods 31.0

Social development

In the early 2000s when oil prices soared and offered Chávez funds not seen since the beginning of Venezuela's economic collapse in the 1980s, Chávez's government became "semi-authoritarian and hyper-populist" and consolidated its power over the economy in order to gain control of large amounts of resources.[45][182] Domestically, Chávez used such oil funds for populist policies, creating the Bolivarian missions, aimed at providing public services to improve economic, cultural and social conditions.[45][183] From 1999–2009, 60% of government revenues focused on social programs[184]Vorlage:Better source while social investment went from 8.4% of GDP in 1988 to 18.8% in 2008.[185]Vorlage:Better source Despite warnings near the beginning of Chávez's tenure in the early 2000s,[45] Chávez's government continuously overspent in social spending and did not save enough money for any future economic turmoil, which Venezuela faced shortly before and after his death.[182][186] On the year of Chávez's death, Venezuela was still categorized as having high human development on its Human Development Index in 2013 according to the United Nations Development Programme, although human development began to decline in Venezuela within a year, with the country dropping 10 ranks by 2014.[187]

Poverty and hunger

Extreme poverty and lack of food and medicines has pushed more than three million Venezuelans to leave the country in recent years.[188] Andres Bello Catholic University conducted a study of poverty that found the poorest 20% of Venezuelans had 1.4% of the nation's wealth, down from 3.4% in 2014, while the richest 10% had 61% of the nation's wealth, up from 30%.[189]

According to government figures released in April 2017, 1,446 children under the age of 1 died in 2016, representing a 30 percent increase in one year.[190] As of August 2017, 31 million people suffered from severe food shortages.[191] The ENCOVI universities survey found that 73% of Venezuelans said they had lost 9 kg (19 lbs) of body weight in 2016[192] and 64% had lost 11 kg (25 lbs) in 2017.[193][194]

When the country's economy collapsed in 2014, hunger and malnutrition became a severe problem.[190] In 2015, close to 45% of Venezuelans said they were unable to afford food at times. In 2018, this figure rose to 79%, one of the highest rates in the world.[195]

Although poverty initially declined under Chávez, Venezuela's poverty rate increased to 28% by 2013, with extreme poverty rates increasing 4.4% to 10% according to the Venezuelan government's INE.[196] Estimates of poverty by the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) and Luis Pedro España, a sociologist at the Universidad Católica Andrés Bello, showed an increase of poverty in Venezuela.[197] ECLAC showed a 2013 poverty rate of 32% while Pedro España calculated a 2015 rate of 48%.[197] The Venezuelan government estimated that 33% were in poverty in the first half of 2015 and then stopped producing statistics.[104] According to Venezuelan NGO PROVEA, by the end of 2015 there would be the same number of Venezuelans living in poverty as there was in 2000, reversing the advancements against poverty by Chávez.[197] The ENCOVI annual survey by three universities estimated poverty at 48% in 2014, 82% in 2016 and 87% in 2017.[194]

In relation to hunger, under-nutrition, undernourishment and the percentage of children under the age of five who are moderately or severely underweight decreased earlier in Chávez's tenure.[198] However, shortages in Venezuela as a result of price control policies left the majority of Venezuelans without adequate products after his death.

Education

The total net enrollment ratio in primary education for both sexes increased from 87% in 1999 to 93.9% in 2009.[198] The primary completion rate for both sexes reached 95.1% in 2009 as compared to 80.8% in 1991.[198] The literacy rates of 15- to 24-year-olds in 2007, for men and women, were 98% and 98.8%, respectively.[198] During the Bolivarian diaspora, a large percentage of the millions of Venezuelans who left the country were highly educated, resulting in a brain drain in the country.[199][200]

Since starting in 2003, the free government program Mission Robinson had taught more than 2.3 million people to read and write as of 2012. The program also focused much of its attention on reaching out to geographically isolated and historically excluded members of the population, including indigenous groups and Afro-descendants.[201]Vorlage:Better source In 2008, Francisco Rodríguez of Wesleyan University in Connecticut and Daniel Ortega of IESA stated that there was "little evidence" of "statistically distinguishable effect on Venezuelan illiteracy" during the Chávez administration.[202] The Venezuelan government claimed that it had taught 1.5 million Venezuelans to read,[203] but the study found that "only 1.1m were illiterate to begin with" and that the illiteracy reduction of less than 100,000 can be attributed to adults that were elderly and died.[202]

Health care

Healthcare spending by percentage of Venezuela's GDP
Source: World Bank

Following the Bolivarian Revolution and the establishment of the Bolivarian government, initial healthcare practices were promising with the installation of a free healthcare system parallel to the existing national public health system, with the assistance received from Cuban medical professionals providing aid. The Bolivarian government's failure to concentrate on healthcare for Venezuelans, the reduction of healthcare spending and government corruption eventually affected medical practices in Venezuela, causing avoidable deaths along with an emigration of medical professionals to other countries.[69][204]

Venezuela's reliance on imported goods and its complicated exchange rates initiated under Chávez led to increasing shortages during the late-2000s and into the 2010s that affected the availability of medicines and medical equipment in the country.[204] The United Nations reported an increase in the maternal mortality ratio, which increased from 93 per 100,000 in 1990 to 110 per 100,000 in 2013.[205] Following shortages of many medical and common goods in 2014, Venezuelan women have had difficulties accessing contraceptives and were forced to change prescriptions or search several stores and the Internet for their medications.[206] Shortage of antiretroviral medicines to treat HIV/AIDS affected about 50,000 Venezuelans in 2014 as well, potentially causing thousands of Venezuelans with HIV to develop AIDS.[207]

Venezuela is also the only country in Latin America where the incidence of malaria is increasing, allegedly due to illegal mining. In 2013, Venezuela registered the highest number of cases of malaria in the past 50 years, with 300 of 100,000 Venezuelans being infected with the disease.[208]

Technology

In 1990, the number of Internet users was minimal, but 35.63% of Venezuelans were Internet users by 2010.[198] In fact, the number of Internet subscribers has increased sixfold.[209] Programs such as the National Technological Literacy Plan, which provides free software and computers to schools, have assisted Venezuela in meeting this goal.[209] However, several experts state that the poor infrastructure in Venezuela had created a poor quality of Internet in Venezuela, which has one of the slowest Internet speeds in the world.[210] The lack of US$ due to the Venezuelan governments currency controls has also damaged Internet services because technological equipment must be imported into Venezuela.[210]

The number of fixed telephone lines per 100 inhabitants was 7.56 in 1990. The number increased to 24.44 in 2010.[198] In 2000, 2,535,966 Venezuelans had landline telephones. By 2009, this had increased to 6,866,626.[184]

The Bolivarian government has also launched an aerospace program in cooperation with the People's Republic of China who built and launched two satellites that are currently in orbit—a communications satellite called Simón Bolívar and a remote sensing satellite called Miranda. In July 2014, President Maduro announced that a third satellite would be built by Chinese–Venezuelan bilateral cooperation.[211][212]

See also

Portal: Money – Übersicht zu Wikipedia-Inhalten zum Thema Money

Notes

Vorlage:Reflist

References

Vorlage:Reflist

OPEC OPEC Vorlage:SACN Vorlage:South America in topic Vorlage:Venezuela topics Vorlage:World Trade Organization

  1. a b Background Note: Venezuela U.S. Department of State. Retrieved 29 October 2011.
  2. Anatoly Kurmanaev: Venezuela’s Collapse Is the Worst Outside of War in Decades, Economists Say In: The New York Times, 17. Mai 2019. Abgerufen am 30. Mai 2019 (amerikanisches Englisch). 
  3. The World Bank Group: Trade (% of GDP) | Data. In: data.worldbank.org. 2019, abgerufen am 6. April 2019.
  4. Risque pays du Venezuela : Commerce international. In: Societe Generale, Import Export solutions. 1. Mai 2018, archiviert vom Original am 19. Juni 2018; abgerufen am 19. Juni 2018 (französisch): „Traditionnellement, le pétrole représente plus de 95% des exportations du Venezuela. Le pays exporte aussi du fer, de la bauxite et de l'aluminium, des produits agricoles, des produits semi-manufacturés, des véhicules et des produits chimiques. Les principaux clients du Venezuela sont la Chine, l'Inde et Singapour. Le pays importe des produits manufacturés et de luxe, des machines et des équipements pour le secteur des transports, du matériel de construction et des produits pharmaceutiques. Les principaux fournisseurs du Venezuela sont les Etats-Unis, la Chine et le Brésil.“
  5. Margarita López Maya: El ocaso del chavismo: Venezuela 2005–2015. 2016, ISBN 978-84-17014-25-4, S. 349–51.
  6. a b c d Referenzfehler: Ungültiges <ref>-Tag; kein Text angegeben für Einzelnachweis mit dem Namen CIAWFVE.
  7. a b Venezuela’s currency: The not-so-strong bolívar In: The Economist, 11 February 2013. Abgerufen im 18 February 2013 
  8. Benedict Mander: Venezuelan devaluation sparks panic In: Financial Times, 10 February 2013. Abgerufen im 11 February 2013 
  9. Venezuela’s economy: Medieval policies In: The Economist, 20 August 2011. Abgerufen im 23 February 2014 
  10. "Terminal Risks for Independent Fiscal Institutions: Lessons from IFIs in Hungary and Venezuela". Social Science Research Network (SSRN). Retrieved 18 July 2017.
  11. a b Juan Cristóbal Nagel: Looking Into the Black Box of Venezuela’s Economy, 13 July 2015. Abgerufen im 14 July 2015 
  12. Steve Hanke: Venezuela's Hyperinflation Hits 80,000% Per Year in 2018. In: Forbes. 1. Januar 2019, abgerufen am 26. März 2019 (englisch).
  13. Ana Vanessa Herrero, Elisabeth Malkin: Venezuela Issues New Bank Notes Because of Hyperinflation In: The New York Times, 16 January 2017. Abgerufen im 17 January 2017 
  14. Samuel Alhadeff: Venezuelan Emigration, Explained. In: www.wilsoncenter.org. Oktober 2018;.
  15. Patrick Gillespie: Venezuela just defaulted, moving deeper into crisis In: CNNMoney, 14 November 2017. Abgerufen im 15 November 2017 
  16. Venezuela in 'selective default' In: BBC News, 14 November 2017. Abgerufen im 15 November 2017 
  17. J.J.Esparza: Cubagua
  18. Troy Floyd: The Columbus Dynasty in the Caribbean, 1492-1526. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque 1973, S. 204–206.
  19. Kevin Healy: The Salt Sentinel. In: South American Explorer. S. 35–36 (saexplorers.org [PDF; abgerufen am 18. Februar 2016]).
  20. Henry Kamen: Empire: How Spain Became a World Power,. Harper Perennial, ISBN 978-0-06-093264-0, S. 261.
  21. Arcila Farias, Eduardo, Economia colonicla de Venezuela (1946)
  22. Referenzfehler: Ungültiges <ref>-Tag; kein Text angegeben für Einzelnachweis mit dem Namen Manresa 1.
  23. Jean-J. Dauxion Lavaysse: A statistical, commercial, and political description of Venezuela, Trinidad, Margarita, and Tobago: containing various anecdotes and observations, illustrative of the past and present state of these interesting countries; from the French of M. Lavaysse: with an introduction and explanatory notes, by the editor [Edward Blaquière]. Public domain Auflage. G. and W.B. Whittaker, 1820, S. 222 (google.com).
  24. Tomas Centeno, Ernesto Revello: Venezuela – Historical Review. Emerging Countries Organization, archiviert vom Original am 27. November 2014; abgerufen am 12. Mai 2013.
  25. a b Referenzfehler: Ungültiges <ref>-Tag; kein Text angegeben für Einzelnachweis mit dem Namen F.
  26. a b c Referenzfehler: Ungültiges <ref>-Tag; kein Text angegeben für Einzelnachweis mit dem Namen G.
  27. a b Humphreys (1967:139)
  28. a b Referenzfehler: Ungültiges <ref>-Tag; kein Text angegeben für Einzelnachweis mit dem Namen Humphreys.
  29. King (2007:249)
  30. Graff, Henry F., Grover Cleveland (2002). Vorlage:ISBN. pp123-25
  31. Referenzfehler: Ungültiges <ref>-Tag; kein Text angegeben für Einzelnachweis mit dem Namen E.
  32. a b [1], OrienteWeb, accessdate=2010-08-28
  33. Gustavo Coronel: The Nationalization of the Venezuelan Oil Industry. Heath and Company, 1983.
  34. Referenzfehler: Ungültiges <ref>-Tag; kein Text angegeben für Einzelnachweis mit dem Namen Martinez.
  35. Yergin, Daniel. The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, and Power. New York:Simon and Schuster. 1990. pp. 233–36; 432
  36. a b Referenzfehler: Ungültiges <ref>-Tag; kein Text angegeben für Einzelnachweis mit dem Namen Caballero.
  37. Referenzfehler: Ungültiges <ref>-Tag; kein Text angegeben für Einzelnachweis mit dem Namen C.
  38. Yergin 1990, p. 435
  39. NationMaster. "GDP per capita in 1950 statics.".
  40. Alexander, Robert. "Nature and Progress of Agrarian Reform in Latin America." The Journal of Economic History. Vol. 23, No. 4 (December 1963), pp. 559–73.
  41. Yergin 1990, pp. 510–13
  42. Yergin 1990, p. 767
  43. McCaughan, Michael. The Battle of Venezuela. New York: Seven Stories Press. 2005. p. 63.
  44. McCaughan, Michael. The Battle of Venezuela. London: Latin America Bureau. 2004. p. 31.
  45. a b c d e f g h i j k Andrew Heritage: Financial Times World Desk Reference. Dorling Kindersley, 2002, ISBN 978-0-7894-8805-3, S. 618–21.
  46. a b c "Venezuela Inflation rate (consumer prices)". Indexmundi. 2010. Retrieved 16 August 2010.
  47. a b Sue Branford: Hugo Chavez fails to overthrow Venezuela's government, 5 February 1992. Abgerufen im 7 February 2016 
  48. Javier Corrales, Michael Penfold: Dragon in the Tropics: The Legacy of Hugo Chávez. Brookings Institution Press, 2015, ISBN 0-8157-2593-0, S. 5.
  49. McCaughan 2004, p. 32.
  50. Kelly, Janet, and Palma, Pedro (2006), "The Syndrome of Economic Decline and the Quest for Change", in McCoy, Jennifer and Myers, David (eds, 2006), The Unraveling of Representative Democracy in Venezuela, Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 207
  51. McCaughan 2004, p. 73.
  52. United Nations data, National accounts estimates of main aggregates. web.archive.org Fehler bei Vorlage * Parametername unbekannt (Vorlage:Webarchiv): "date"Vorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/Parameter Fehler bei Vorlage:Webarchiv: Genau einer der Parameter 'wayback', 'webciteID', 'archive-today', 'archive-is' oder 'archiv-url' muss angegeben werden.Vorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/Linktext_fehltVorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/URL Fehler bei Vorlage:Webarchiv: enWP-Wert im Parameter 'url'.
  53. Weisbrot and Sandoval, 2008. Sections: 'Executive Summary,' and 'Social Spending, Poverty, and Employment.'
  54. GDP deflator (base year varies by country) | Data. In: data.worldbank.org. World Bank national accounts data and OECD National Accounts data files., 19. August 2016, archiviert vom Original am 19. August 2016; abgerufen am 19. August 2016.
  55. Will Grant: Why Venezuela's government is taking over apartments In: BBC, 15 November 2010. Abgerufen im 15 December 2013 
  56. Expropriations in Venezuela, 29 October 2010 
  57. Simon Romero: A 45-Story Walkup Beckons the Desperate In: The New York Times, 28 February 2011. Abgerufen im 15 December 2013 
  58. a b c Toothaker, Christopher. "Chavez: Venezuela's economy soon to recover". Bloomberg Businessweek. 8 August 2010. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  59. Cancel, Daniel. "Chavez Says Venezuela's Economy Is `Already Recovering' Amid Recession." Bloomberg. 8 August 2010. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  60. Vorlage:Es icon"FMI: Venezuela único país cuya economía se contraerá este año". El Universal. 21 April 2010. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  61. John H. Hanke: Measuring Misery around the World. The CATO Institute, abgerufen am 30. April 2014.
  62. Steve H. Hanke. In: Cato Institute. Abgerufen am 1. Juli 2015.
  63. Ease of Doing Business in Venezuela, RB. Abgerufen am 21. November 2015.
  64. DOING BUSINESS 2013. In: Report. International Finance Corporation, archiviert vom Original am 30. Mai 2014; abgerufen am 1. April 2014.
  65. Venezuela Slashes Currency Value (Memento des Originals vom 16 October 2015 im Internet Archive) In: Wall Street Journal, 9 February 2013. Abgerufen im 14 December 2013 
  66. Virginia Lopez: Venezuela food shortages: 'No one can explain why a rich country has no food' In: The Guardian, 26 September 2013. Abgerufen im 14 December 2013 
  67. Médicos del Hospital Universitario de Caracas suspenden cirugías por falta de insumos (Memento des Originals vom 28 February 2014 im Internet Archive) In: Globovision, 21 February 2014 
  68. Latin America’s weakest economies are reaching breaking-point, 1 February 2014 
  69. a b Venezuela’s medical crisis requires world’s attention, 28 April 2015. Abgerufen im 17 May 2015 
  70. Doctors say Venezuela's health care in collapse (Memento des Originals vom 26 February 2014 im Internet Archive) In: Associated Press. Abgerufen im 22 February 2014 
  71. Country and region specific forecasts and data. In: World Bank. Abgerufen am 15. März 2015.
  72. Amid Rationing, Venezuela Takes The Misery Crown In: Investors Business Daily. Abgerufen im 1 September 2014 
  73. Venezuela’s economy Of oil and coconut water Probably the world’s worst-managed economy, 20 September 2014. Abgerufen im 21 September 2014 
  74. Citi considera que la economía venezolana es un "desastre" In: El Universal, 3 May 2014. Abgerufen im 5 May 2014 
  75. Doing Business 2014. The World Bank, archiviert vom Original am 14. Juli 2014; abgerufen am 3. Juli 2014.
  76. The Heritage Foundation. In: About Heritage. Abgerufen am 1. Juli 2015.
  77. Country Rankings: World & Global Economy Rankings on Economic Freedom. The Heritage Foundation, abgerufen am 26. März 2014.
  78. Nicolle Yapur: Políticas económicas en Venezuela ahuyentan el capital extranjero (Memento des Originals vom 3 July 2014 im Internet Archive), 30 June 2014. Abgerufen im 3 July 2014 
  79. Scariest Places on the Business Frontiers, 2 July 2014. Abgerufen im 12 July 2014 
  80. Yuki Hagiwara: Toyota Halts Venezuela Production as Car Sales Fall In: Bloomberg, 7 February 2014. Abgerufen im 8 February 2014 
  81. Ford Cutting Production in Venezuela on Growing Dollar Shortage In: Businessweek, 14 January 2014. Abgerufen im 15 January 2014 
  82. Roberto Deniz: General Motors sees no resolution to operations in Venezuela (Memento des Originals vom 21 February 2014 im Internet Archive) In: El Universal, 7 February 2014. Abgerufen im 8 February 2014 
  83. Mery Mogollon: Venezuela sees more airlines suspend ticket sales, demand payment In: Los Angeles Times, 24 January 2014. Abgerufen im 25 January 2014 
  84. Peter Wilson: Airlines keep cutting off Venezuelans from tickets In: USA Today, 24 January 2014. Abgerufen im 25 January 2014 
  85. Peter Wilson: Venezuelans blocked from buying flights out In: USA Today, 10 January 2014. Abgerufen im 15 January 2014 
  86. a b Venezuela Shuffles Economic Team (Memento des Originals vom 2 July 2015 im Internet Archive) In: The Wall Street Journal, 15 January 2014. Abgerufen im 16 January 2014 
  87. Elizabeth Anderson: Which are the 15 most miserable countries in the world?, 3 March 2015. Abgerufen im 4 March 2015 
  88. A Catarina Saraiva, Michelle Jamrisko, Andre Fonseca Tartar: The 15 Most Miserable Economies in the World, 2 March 2015. Abgerufen im 4 March 2015 
  89. a b Daniel Gallas: Venezuela: Economy on the brink?, BBC News Latin America, 7 December 2015 
  90. Virginia Lopez: Venezuela's economic crisis worsens as oil prices fall In: www.aljazeera.com, 8 January 2016 
  91. Daniel Lozano: Ni un paso atrás: Maduro insiste con su receta económica In: www.lanacion.com.ar, 8 January 2015. Abgerufen im 8 January 2016 
  92. a b Bank Of America prevé más controles para la economía de Venezuela In: El Nacional, 13 January 2016. Abgerufen im 14 January 2016 
  93. IMF: Venezuela Inflation to Surpass 700 Percent In: The New York Times, 22 January 2016 
  94. FMI: Inflación de Venezuela en 2016 será de 500%, 17 January 2015. Abgerufen im 20 January 2016 
  95. a b Alex Leff: What's it like under 1,000 percent inflation? Venezuela is about to find out., 26 January 2016. Abgerufen im 28 January 2016 
  96. World Economic Outlook. In: International Monetary Fund. April 2016, abgerufen am 29. Mai 2016.
  97. Steve H. Hanke: Venezuela's Lying Statistics, 15 January 2016. Abgerufen im 20 January 2016 
  98. Hungry Venezuelans Flee in Boats to Escape Economic Collapse. In: The New York Times. 25. November 2016;.
  99. Venezuelans face collapsing economy, starvation and crime.
  100. Why you need sackfuls of banknotes to shop in Venezuela In: BBC News, 18. Dezember 2016. Abgerufen am 19. Dezember 2016 (english). 
  101. Jim Wyss: Entering a ‘world of economic chaos,’ Venezuela struggles with hyperinflation In: Miami Herald, 12 December 2016. Abgerufen am 19. Dezember 2016 
  102. Vorlage:Citation
  103. Venezuela eliminates heavily subsidized DIPRO forex rate In: Reuters, 30 January 2018 
  104. a b Vivian Sequera: Venezuelans report big weight losses in 2017 as hunger hits In: Reuters, 18 February 2018. Abgerufen im 23 February 2018 
  105. Rachelle Krygier: Venezuela launches the 'petro,' its cryptocurrency. In: The Washington Post. 20. Februar 2018, abgerufen am 22. März 2018.
  106. Venezuelan Hyperinflation Explodes, Soaring Over 440,000 Percent In: Bloomberg, 18 January 2018. Abgerufen im 7 March 2018 
  107. Stephen Gibbs Caracas: Venezuela suffering 25,000% inflation In: The Times, 12 June 2018. Abgerufen im 23 July 2018 
  108. "Russia extends lifeline as Venezuela struggles with 'selective default'".
  109. "Venezuela oil assets seizure by Conoco may start wave".
  110. Final List of Deliverable Obligations for the 2017 Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Credit Derivatives Auction Settlement Terms. In: www.cbonds.com. Abgerufen am 25. Januar 2019.
  111. Venezuela: bonds. In: www.cbonds.com. Abgerufen am 25. Januar 2019.
  112. Beatriz Beiras: Venezuela economy fractured with shortages of essentials across the country, 19 May 2016. Abgerufen im 26 May 2016 
  113. OPEC : OPEC Share of World Crude Oil Reserves. In: www.opec.org. Abgerufen am 26. März 2019.
  114. Vorlage:Es icon "Contribución petrolera se duplica por ajuste cambiario." El Universal. 11 January 2010. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  115. Global gasoline-price subsidies evaporate.
  116. Venezuela: Maduro anuncia una devaluación y un aumento de hasta el 6.000% en el precio de la gasolina, Feb 17, 2016 
  117. Venezuela raises petrol price for first time in 20 years, Feb 18, 2016 
  118. Emili Blasco: Venezuela se queda sin suficientes divisas para pagar las importaciones In: ABC News (Spain), 23 April 2014. Abgerufen im 24 April 2014 
  119. Venezuela | Energy 2018. In: GLI – Global Legal Insights Venezuela | Energy 2018. Abgerufen am 18. Dezember 2017 (englisch).
  120. David Hambling: Hydro power falters in persistent drought In: The Guardian, 30. März 2016. Abgerufen am 18. Dezember 2017 (english). 
  121. The World Bank Group: Manufacturing, value added (% of GDP) | Data. In: data.worldbank.org. 2019, abgerufen am 6. April 2019.
  122. Venezuela's aluminum industry operates at 29% of capacity (Memento des Originals vom 22 January 2013 im Webarchiv archive.today). Abgerufen im 15 November 2012 
  123. Venezuela's aluminum and steel production below 1997 numbers. Abgerufen im 15 November 2012 
  124. En imágenes: Así fue el último día de General Motors en Venezuela In: Venezuela Al Dia, 16 May 2014. Abgerufen im 19 May 2014 
  125. Dolorosa imagen de nuestra industria automotriz: El cierre de General Motors Venezolana In: La Patilla. Abgerufen im 19 May 2014 
  126. Roberto Deniz: Banco Central reporta que la escasez de vehículos llega al 100% In: El Universal, 4 May 2014. Abgerufen im 5 May 2014 
  127. Christopher Woody: Venezuela's looming economic catastrophe, in one graphic, 20 July 2016. Abgerufen im 21 July 2016 
  128. a b Balanza de pagos y otros indicadores del sector externo. Exportaciones e importaciones de bienes y servicios (millones de USD). Banco Central Venezuela; (spanisch).
  129. Venezuela In: U.S. Department of State. Abgerufen am 22. August 2018 (amerikanisches Englisch). 
  130. OEC – Venezuela (VEN) Exports, Imports, and Trade Partners. In: atlas.media.mit.edu. The Observatory of Economic Complexity, abgerufen am 22. Juni 2019.
  131. a b https://atlas.media.mit.edu/en/profile/country/ven/
  132. Suggett, James. "Latest Venezuela-China Deals: Orinoco Agriculture, Civil Aviation, Steel, and $5 Billion Credit Line." Venezuelanalysis.com. 3 August 2010. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  133. Bruce, Iain. "Chavez calls for democracy at work." BBC News. 17 August 2005. Retrieved 22 September 2006.
  134. Charlie Devereux: Owens-Illinois Seizure by Chavez May Undermine Venezuela's Empresas Polar In: Bloomberg, 26 October 2010 
  135. Labour’s Love Lost The Economist. 25 January 2014. Retrieved 16 June 2015
  136. Minimum Salary Increase Global Workplace Insider. 4 December 2014. Retrieved 16 June 2015.
  137. Joshua Goodman: Venezuela Raises Minimum Wage 30 Pct Amid Raging Inflation (Memento des Originals vom 18 May 2015 im Internet Archive), 1 May 2015. Abgerufen im 10 May 2015 
  138. "Desde que Maduro está allí hemos perdido 3 millones 345 mil empleos": Marcela Máspero, coordinadora de la Unión Nacional de Trabajadores (Memento des Originals vom 17 September 2017 im Internet Archive) In: NTN24, 16 September 2017. Abgerufen im 17 September 2017 (spanisch). 
  139. Federación de trabajadores públicos cifra en cerca de 4 millones pérdida de empleos desde 2013. In: La Patilla. Abgerufen am 28. Dezember 2017 (europäisches Spanisch).
  140. a b Christopher Toothaker: Venezuela's Electricity To Be Rationed Following Recurring Power Outages In: Huffington Post, 16 June 2011. Abgerufen im 14 December 2013 
  141. Toh Han Shih: China Railway Group's project in Venezuela hits snag In: South China Morning Post, 11 April 2013. Abgerufen im 14 December 2013 
  142. a b Lufthansa to suspend flights to Venezuela. In: BBC News. 29. Mai 2016, abgerufen am 29. Mai 2016.
  143. Power cut paralyses Venezuela In: The Guardian, 4 September 2013. Abgerufen im 14 December 2013 
  144. Venezuela Power Outage Plunges Most Of Nation Into Darkness In: Huffington Post, 2 December 2013. Abgerufen im 14 December 2013 
  145. Romero, Simon. "Venezuela to Give Currency New Name and Numbers." The New York Times. 18 March 2007. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  146. Molano, Walter. "Venezuela is Priced for Failure." Latin American Herald Tribune. 2009. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  147. Ellsworth, Brian. "Venezuela cuts three zeros off bolivar currency." Reuters. 1 January 2008. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  148. Weisbrot, Mark, and Sandoval, Luis.The Venezuelan Economy in the Chávez Years[2]. Center for Economic and Policy Research. July 2007.
  149. Forero, Juan. "Despite billions in U.S. aid, Colombia struggles to reduce poverty." The Washington Post. 19 April 2010. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  150. Vorlage:Es icon "Situación de la pobreza en la región." Panorama social de América Latina. 2007. Retrieved 4 September 2010.
  151. Daniel, Frank. "Venezuela economy shrinks for first time in 5 years." Reuters. 20 August 2009. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  152. Daniel, Frank. "Chavez says Venezuela in recession, by US yardstick." Reuters. 22 November 2009. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  153. Márquez, Humberto. "El Niño Dries Up Water, Power, Food Supply." web.archive.org Fehler bei Vorlage * Parametername unbekannt (Vorlage:Webarchiv): "date"Vorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/Parameter Fehler bei Vorlage:Webarchiv: Genau einer der Parameter 'wayback', 'webciteID', 'archive-today', 'archive-is' oder 'archiv-url' muss angegeben werden.Vorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/Linktext_fehltVorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/URL Fehler bei Vorlage:Webarchiv: enWP-Wert im Parameter 'url'. IPS News. 23 October 2009. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  154. a b c Cawthorne, Andrew."Venezuela recession drags, GDP falls 5.8 pct Q1". Reuters. 25 May 2010. Retrieved 13 August 2010
  155. Venezuela’s Forced Price Cuts Damp World’s Fastest Inflation (2) In: Businessweek, 30 December 2013. Abgerufen im 16 January 2014 
  156. Venezuela Slashes Currency Value (Memento des Originals vom 16 October 2015 im Internet Archive) In: The Wall Street Journal, 9 February 2013. Abgerufen im 16 January 2014 
  157. Mery Mogollon, Chris Kraul: Government-ordered price cuts spawn desperation shopping in Venezuela In: Los Angeles Times, 16 November 2013. Abgerufen im 16 January 2014 
  158. Anatoly Kurmanaev: Venezuela in Data Denial After Inflation Tops 50%: Andes Credit In: Bloomberg, 9 January 2014. Abgerufen im 16 January 2014 
  159. Au Venezuela, l’inflation a été de 130 060 % en 2018 In: Le Monde, 29 May 2019. Abgerufen im 31 May 2019 (französisch). 
  160. Gideon Long: Venezuela data offer rare glimpse of economic chaos. In: Financial Times. 29. Mai 2019, abgerufen am 31. Mai 2019.
  161. a b Lesley Wroughton, Corina Pons: IMF denies pressuring Venezuela to release economic data In: Reuters, 30 May 2019. Abgerufen im 31 May 2019 
  162. Report for Selected Countries and Subjects. Abgerufen am 2. September 2018 (amerikanisches Englisch).
  163. Venezuela’s black market rate for US dollars just jumped by almost 40% In: Quartz, 26 March 2014. Abgerufen im 27 March 2014 
  164. CADIVI, una medidia necesaria web.archive.org Fehler bei Vorlage * Parametername unbekannt (Vorlage:Webarchiv): "date"Vorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/Parameter Fehler bei Vorlage:Webarchiv: Genau einer der Parameter 'wayback', 'webciteID', 'archive-today', 'archive-is' oder 'archiv-url' muss angegeben werden.Vorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/Linktext_fehltVorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/URL Fehler bei Vorlage:Webarchiv: enWP-Wert im Parameter 'url'.
  165. Steve Hanke: The World's Troubled Currencies. The Market Oracle, abgerufen am 26. Januar 2014.
  166. Indicadores Economía Venezolana. In: dolartoday.com. Abgerufen am 22. März 2018.
  167. Girish Gupta: The ‘Cheapest’ Country in the World In: TIME, 24 January 2014. Abgerufen im 26 January 2014 
  168. Corina Pons: McDonald’s Agrees to Cut the Price of a Venezuelan Big Mac Combo In: Bloomberg, 14 January 2014. Abgerufen im 26 January 2014 
  169. Joshua Goodman: Venezuela overhauls foreign exchange system In: Bloomberg, 22 January 2014. Abgerufen im 26 January 2014 
  170. Kejal Vyas: Venezuela's Consumer Prices Climbed 56% in 2013 (Memento des Originals vom 15 June 2015 im Internet Archive) In: Wall Street Journal, 30 December 2013. Abgerufen im 26 January 2014 
  171. Venezuela inflation data under scrutiny In: Buenos Aires Herald, 31 December 2013. Abgerufen im 26 January 2014 
  172. Baten, Jörg: A History of the Global Economy. From 1500 to the Present. Cambridge University Press, 2016, ISBN 978-1-107-50718-0, S. 150.
  173. a b World Bank. "Table 24." World Development Report. 1980. pp. 156–57.
  174. a b c d Instituto Nacional de Estadística[3]
  175. Income Gini coefficient. In: United Nations Development Programme. United Nations, abgerufen am 21. September 2015.
  176. Human Development Report 2016. In: UNDP.
  177. Venezuela: a nation in a state, 18 February 2016. Abgerufen im 5 March 2016 
  178. "Ficha Técnicas de Línea de Pobreza por Ingreso." web.archive.org Fehler bei Vorlage * Parametername unbekannt (Vorlage:Webarchiv): "date"Vorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/Parameter Fehler bei Vorlage:Webarchiv: Genau einer der Parameter 'wayback', 'webciteID', 'archive-today', 'archive-is' oder 'archiv-url' muss angegeben werden.Vorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/Linktext_fehltVorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/URL Fehler bei Vorlage:Webarchiv: enWP-Wert im Parameter 'url'. Estadísticas Sociales y Ambientales. El Instituto Nacional de Estadísticas. Retrieved 4 September 2010. The Instituto Nacional de Estadística describes their method for compiling these statistics.
  179. Pobreza. In: instituto nacional de estadistica. Abgerufen am 1. September 2014.
  180. Venezuela Achieves Millennium Goals. In: Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. Archiviert vom Original am 3. September 2014; abgerufen am 1. September 2014.
  181. Factsheet (Memento des Originals vom 3 February 2009 im Internet Archive) In: The Economist. Abgerufen im 17 February 2009 
  182. a b Javier Corrales: Don’t Blame It On the Oil, 7 May 2015. Abgerufen im 10 May 2015 
  183. Gregory Wilpert: Changing Venezuela By Taking Power: The History and Policies of the Chavez Government. Verso, 2007, ISBN 978-1-84467-552-4, S. 69 (archive.org).
  184. a b "Fact Sheet: Millennium Development Goals." Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. 12 October 2010. Web 4 March 2012.
  185. Janicke, Kiraz. "Venezuela Reaches the Millennium Development Goals." Venezuela Analysis. 14 July 2009. Web 4 March 2012.
  186. Robert Siegel: For Venezuela, Drop In Global Oil Prices Could Be Catastrophic, 25 December 2014. Abgerufen im 4 January 2015 
  187. 2014 Human Development Report Summary. United Nations Development Programme, 2014, S. 21–5, abgerufen am 27. Juli 2014.
  188. Venezuela crisis: How the political situation escalated In: BBC News. Abgerufen im 24 January 2019 
  189. Luhnow, David: Maduro loses grip on Venezuela's poor, a vital source of his power In: Wall Street Journal, 19 March 2019. Abgerufen im 20 March 2019 
  190. a b Meredith Kohut: As Venezuela Collapses, Children Are Dying of Hunger In: The New York Times, 17. Dezember 2017. Abgerufen am 18. Dezember 2017 (english). 
  191. Emma Graham-Harrison: Hunger eats away at Venezuela’s soul as its people struggle to survive In: The Observer, 26. August 2017. Abgerufen am 18. Dezember 2017 (english). 
  192. Maritza Landaeta-Jiménez: ENCOVI, Encuesta Nacional de Condiciones de Vida, Venezuela 2016, Alimentación. (deutsch: National Survey of Living Conditions, Venezuela 2016, Food). In: ENCOVI, Fundación Bengoa para la Alimentación y Nutrición. Februar 2017, abgerufen am 23. Februar 2018 (spanisch).
  193. Maritza Landaeta-Jiménez: ENCOVI, Encuesta Nacional de Condiciones de Vida, Venezuela 2017, Alimentación I. (deutsch: ENCOVI, National Survey of Living Conditions, Venezuela 2017, Food 1). In: Universidad Catolica Andres Bello. Februar 2018, abgerufen am 23. Februar 2018 (spanisch).
  194. a b Venezuelans report big weight losses in 2017 as hunger hits In: CNBC, 21. Februar 2018. Abgerufen am 23. Februar 2018 
  195. Emma Graham-Harrison: Over half of young Venezuelans want to flee as economy collapses, poll finds. In: the Guardian. 6. März 2018, abgerufen am 7. März 2018 (englisch).
  196. Pobreza. In: INE. Abgerufen am 31. August 2014.
  197. a b c J. J. Gallagher: Venezuela: Does an increase in poverty signal threat to government?, 25 March 2015. Abgerufen im 29 March 2015 
  198. a b c d e f "Millennium Development Goals Indicators." United Nations Statistics Division. Web 4 March 2012.
  199. Antonio Maria Delgado: Venezuela agobiada por la fuga masiva de cerebros, 28 August 2014 
  200. El 90% de los venezolanos que se van tienen formación universitaria, 23 August 2014. Abgerufen im 28 August 2014 
  201. Ellis, Edward. "Venezuela Celebrates Five Years Free of Illiteracy." Venezuela Analysis. 7 November 2010. Web. 20 March 2012.
  202. a b Propaganda, not policy In: The Economist, 28 February 2008. Abgerufen im 3 May 2014 
  203. Humberto Márquez: Venezuela se declara libre de analfabetismo. Inter Press Service, 28. Oktober 2005, archiviert vom Original am 2. April 2015; abgerufen am 29. Dezember 2006 (spanisch).
  204. a b Peter Wilson: The Collapse of Chávezcare, 27 April 2015. Abgerufen im 17 May 2015 
  205. Maternal mortality ratio per 100,000 live births. In: Millennium Development Goals Indicators. United Nations;
  206. Edgar Higuerey: Escasez de anticonceptivos hace cambiar tratamientos (Memento des Originals vom 8 September 2014 im Internet Archive), 5 September 2014. Abgerufen im 7 September 2014 
  207. Venezuela Faces Health Crisis Amid Shortage of HIV/Aids Medication (Memento des Originals vom 3 September 2014 im Internet Archive), 14 May 2014. Abgerufen im 31 August 2014 
  208. Daniel Pardo: The malaria mines of Venezuela, 23 August 2014. Abgerufen im 31 August 2014 
  209. a b Fact Sheet: Venezuela and the Millennium Development Goals. Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela to the UK and Ireland, archiviert vom Original am 23. Mai 2011; abgerufen am 20. März 2012.
  210. a b Daniel Pardo: ¿Por qué internet en Venezuela es tan lento?, 22 September 2014. Abgerufen im 25 September 2014 
  211. 21 July 2014: En 7 claves – Los acuerdos China-Venezuela firmados este lunes. Últimas Noticias, archiviert vom Original am 7. Januar 2016; abgerufen am 28. September 2014: „"The agreement, signed for the development of the program satellite VRSS2, provides for the two nations to share knowledge about the manufacture of the new remote sensing satellite, which will serve to strengthen mapping capabilities in the country, and to contribute to the development of the Venezuelan aerospace industry. "“
  212. Magan, Veronica: Venezuela: Latin America’s Next Space Pioneer? Satellite Today, 23. August 2013, abgerufen am 28. September 2014.