Chavez Frias: hour has come for transformation of Venezuela's economic model
www.vheadline.com
Posted: Sunday, March 02, 2003
By: Roy S. Carson
President Hugo Chavez Frias says the hour has come for the transformation of Venezuela's economic model ... the government is focusing all its forces on concrete details in a plan to generate employment, investment and to generate a superior quality of living for the whole of Venezuela's 23.4 million population.
Chavez Frias was speaking after a Council of Ministers meeting with Venezuelan Guayana Corporation (CVG) president Major General (ret.) Francisco Rangel Gomez , representatives of the Bolivar State Federation of Chambers of Commerce & Industry, the State Governor and regional private company executives to formulate decisions to boost small and medium industries throughout the southeastern region.
The National Executive is to contribute 20 billion bolivares as well as subsidies for the purchase of productive machinery this year and an important quantity of seed maize ... a mill and factory for the production of pre-cooked maize and flour is to be opened.
"The time has arrived for the transformation of our economic model," Chavez Frias said. "We must transcend the 20th century economic model, which only generated wealth and riches for a minority, a model based on inequality which has generated unemployment and poverty through exclusion."
During his visit to Ciudad Guayana, President Chavez initiated a series of workshops in which the national government, together with the CVG and regional government will work with local federations and chambers of commerce under the direction of Special Economic Zones Minister Francisco Natera to kick-start businesses between Santa Elena de Uairen on the Brazilian border all the way up to the Orinoco delta region in parallel with a similatr project in northern Brazil to stimulate economic integration.
Venezuela says firms must behave to get dollars
reuters.com
Fri February 28, 2003 04:06 PM ET
By Alistair Scrutton
CARACAS, Venezuela, Feb 28 (Reuters) - Venezuela's new state currency control board, already branded a tool to punish leftist President Hugo Chavez's business foes, warned on Friday only firms "acting normally" would get vital dollars to trade abroad.
A new mechanism to allow importers to buy dollars will begin on Wednesday, six weeks after populist Chavez halted currency trading and fixed the exchange rate to stop the economy of the world's No. 5 oil producer from imploding amid a recent opposition strike.
Ex-paratrooper Chavez had warned that "coup mongers" -- the term he uses to describe his enemies -- would not get a dollar under the new system and businessmen worry he wants to squeeze private firms by denying his opponents access to trade.
Opposition leaders say the stringent currency curbs give weight to their accusations that the president is ruling like a dictator and wants to install Cuban-style communism.
Edgar Hernandez, a retired military officer and head of the new currency board, said that firms and banks which had hoarded goods or shut their doors during the two-month strike had not been acting normally.
"We intend to manage access to dollars as objectively as we can ... but there are firms that need a change in attitude ... the economic establishment hasn't a normal attitude," said Hernandez, a stiff-backed man with army-style short-cut hair.
But that did little to dispel fears that some businesses, including fast food outlets, may not get dollars to import.
Opposition leaders say the stringent currency curbs give weight to their accusations that the president is ruling like a dictator and wants to install Cuban-style communism.
Some 60 percent of Venezuela's goods currently come from abroad and companies from steel producers to whiskey sellers desperately need dollars to keep operating.
"We must pray for the currency controls," Hernandez, who is an ally of Chavez and took part in a botched 1992 coup led by him, said in a speech immersed with religious imagery.
"Companies must act with love," he added, advising that they donate 10 percent of their profits to social projects and another 10 percent as incentives for workers.
Since Jan 22 it has been impossible for companies to buy dollars unless they purchase on a burgeoning black market where the dollar is up to 40 percent more expensive.
Hernandez said 19 banks, including some of the biggest in the country, signed deals to process the dollar applications from firms. Banks include major foreign banks operating in Venezuela such as Citibank C.N and ABN Amro AAH.AS .
The currency board will publish by Tuesday the imports that the government will give priority to, including basic foods and plastic packaging and supplies for utility industries.
"Those that are not on the list should not apply (for dollars)," he said.
FAST FOOD OUTLETS NEED NOT APPLY
Venezuelans may soon face a shortages of their favorite hamburgers and foreign cheeses.
"I don't know how products for fast food restaurants will be imported. To use them as an example, these all closed in December and January (during the strike). Are we going to give dollars so that they can import?" Hernandez said.
He also said imported luxuries like some foreign cheeses, "some very tasty ones", may also become scarce.
Under the new system supervised by the state currency board companies must apply for dollars through banks. Banks then should receive the dollars from the Central Bank in a process expected to take at least ten days from start to end.
Opposition leaders and private businessmen have warned that the curbs would just further depress the Venezuela economy, already expected to contract by up to 14 percent this year.
Business also fear a mound of red tape will boost contraband and introduce opportunities for state corruption.
Hernandez said the currency controls could be lifted by the end of the year, conditioned on state oil firm PDVSA recovering production lost during a two-month opposition strike that petered out in February.
Opposition leaders and dissident oil workers began the shutdown Dec. 2 to try to pressure Chavez to accept early elections, causing the the Venezuelan bolivar to slip about 24 percent against the dollar from the start of 2003.
The new currency regime set a fixed exchange rate of 1,596/1,600 bolivars to the dollar. (Additional reporting by Pascal Fletcher)
United States brands Venezuela as an unreliable supplier of crude oil
www.vheadline.com
Posted: Friday, February 28, 2003
By: Robert Rudnicki
The United States State Department has told senior Venezuelan officials that it now sees Venezuela as an unreliable supplier of petroleum and expressed serious doubts over political unrest which it believes has caused Venezuela's reliability to come into question.
State Department spokesman Charles Barclay said the Venezuelan government would have to settle its differences with the opposition and reach an agreement to end the current unrest before Venezuela could once again be seen as a reliable supplier ... "a constitutional, democratic, peaceful and electoral" solution must be found.
The comments came as Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) president Ali Rodriguez Araque and Energy & Mines (MEM) Minister Rafael Ramirez were visiting the Washington to assure the US government that it can rely on Venezuela to lift its oil supply should war on Iraq force prices higher.
Fernandez accuses Venezuelan government of pressuring courts
www.vheadline.com
Posted: Thursday, February 27, 2003
By: Robert Rudnicki
Venezuelan Federation of Chambers of Commerce & Industry (Fedecamaras) president Carlos Fernandez is accusing the government of pressuring the courts into taking action against opposition leaders, including himself.
Fernandez comments came during a press conference at his home in Valencia where he is currently under house arrest while awaiting trial for several charges, including treason, for his role as strike leader of the two month long stoppage that started on December 2 and was called off in all but the petroleum sector early this month after failing to achieve its objective of ousting President Hugo Chavez Frias and his government.
Fernandez called on the judiciary to carry out independent and impartial investigations "that will lead to truthful results" without any pressure from any party. The Fedecamaras leader also thanked his supporters for the demonstrations and protests across the country demanding his release.
US$-Bs. exchange rate may be modified in 15 days
www.vheadline.com
Posted: Thursday, February 27, 2003
By: Robert Rudnicki
According to Planning & Development (Cordiplan) Minister Felipe Perez the government is considering changing the current exchange rate of the bolivar, which is pegged at Bs.1,600.00 / Bs.1,596.00 against the US dollar. "We are studying the possibility, we will have 15 days to evaluate and to modify the exchange rate."
- Another option that the government is believed to be considering is changing the rate on a weekly basis under a crawling peg regime.
Dollars will soon be available through seven privately-owned banks following the signing of currency accords with the Currency Administration Commission (Cadivi) with around $40 million likely to be offered every day. Cadivi president Edgar Hernandez Behrens says he expects dollar applications considered to be priority to begin to be processed early next week.