*
*

*Venezuela's Economic Woes?*
by Federico Fuentes

*
*

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*"..Attacks on capital*

This is exactly what the Venezuelan government has done since announcing the
bolivar’s devaluation. It is using its strong position to move against
private capital, punish those sabotaging the economy and promote workers’
control experiments...

With the advantage of the lower bolivar rate for state imports, it has begun
to move against those using speculation and sabotage aimed at causing
discontent via rising inflation, increasing food shortages caused by
hoarding and underproduction.

Since February, the government has taken over two private supermarket
chains. Using the preferential exchange rate, the government will now import
food and white goods via a newly created state import-export company.

The products will be sold cheaply in the state-owned supermarket chains,
undercutting speculators. Six formerly private-owned Bicentenary
hypermarkets now offer goods up to 50% cheaper than private supermarkets.

The aim, Chavez said, is to “displace the hegemony of the bourgeoisie in
handling resources that belong to the people”.

On May 13, Chavez announced the takeover of Mexican-owned food processor
Gruma, which had refused to sell flour in April despite a national shortage.

This was just the latest of a series of nationalisations carried out to
stimulate food production, and stop hoarding and speculation.

These included the takeover of three sugar mills accused of hoarding and
under-producing, a coffee processing company, and the expropriation of land
belonging to Venezuela’s largest food and beverage company, Polar.

To combat speculation in the informal currency market, the government has
intervened in 31 of the country’s 107 brokerage firms during May over
accusations of illegal currency-trading and money laundering.

Chavez said: “If we have to eliminate the whole bunch of brokerages ... well
eliminate them. This country doesn’t need them, we don’t need the savage
capitalism of these rich money-bags.”

The government also halted trading of government bonds. Under a reformed law
passed by the National Assembly, only the Central Bank of Venezuela will be
able to authorise the purchase and sale of foreign currencies.

*Workers’ control*

Using its strong economic position, the government borrowed $20 billion from
China in April as advanced payment for future oil deliveries. This is
helping fund an increase in public investment.

To tackle decades of disinvestment, the government plans to spend $6 billion
on the state electricity sector — strengthened by the nationalisation of six
private companies in 2007.

It has initiated a process of workers’ control in the sector. Workers are
organising committees to help reorganise the industry. Workers have also
elected representatives to management boards.

The government has also increased the minimum wage by 25% this year and
raised pensions for widows and widowers.

On April 30, Chavez announced a $1.168 billion investment package for the
state-owned iron, steel and aluminium companies in Guayana. The package will
fund projects discussed and approved by workers in the relevant companies.

On May 16, Chavez swore in new presidents in eight out of the 15 state-owned
basic industry factories in Guayana that had been chosen by the workers.

Chavez also ordered the nationalisation of transport companies related to
the industrial complex and Venezuelan chemical company Norpro.

*‘Destroy the bourgeois state’*

The new attacks on capital have also led to further splits in the pro-Chavez
camp.

The Homeland For All (PPT) party, until recently allies of the Chavez-led
United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), said it would not form an
alliance for the September elections, but would stand against PSUV
candidates.

The PPT has stepped up criticism of the government’s economic measures.

Lara state governor Henri Falcon defected from the PSUV to the PPT in
opposition to the government’s moves against Polar in his state.

At a May 19 public meeting to welcome discontented PPT members into the
PSUV, Chavez denounced the PPT as “reformists” unwilling to deepen the
anti-capitalist revolution.

Chavez told a May 7 meeting of PSUV candidates for the National Assembly
that the government’s actions meant a battle against “the capitalist state
and the hegemony the capitalists still exercise in different sectors of
national life”.

He said: “We cannot plan out measures thinking that we can or are going to
execute measures in normal conditions ... we have to take into account that
an adversary with a lot of forces is also involved: the bourgeoisie, with
its economic and media power.”

With elections in September, the capitalists are playing hardball. They are
trying to provoke economic chaos and shortages of essential goods — as they
did before the defeat of Chavez’s proposed anti-capitalist constitution
reforms in 2007.

“They are seeking out a way to retake the path of destabilisation”, Chavez
said. “Either we finish off capitalism or capitalism will finish off the
revolution.”

He said the revolutionary forces needed to win the elections and then push
to “accelerate the destruction of the bourgeois state”

[Federico Fuentes is a member of Australia’s Socialist Alliance and is based
in Venezuela as part of Green Left Weekly’s Caracas bureau.]
http://www.countercurrents.org/fuentes230510.htm

-- 


You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



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