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Socialist Project • E-Bulletin No. 773
February 15, 2013

Working-Class Response to Devaluation Measures in Venezuela

Michael A. Lebowitz

We agree that the government decision to devalue the Bolivar can be an
important step toward providing greater funds for social programs and
the state budget at all levels, reducing the unacceptable current
level of imports, encouraging the development of exports other than
oil and helping to create the conditions for new national production.
However, by itself the burden of the devaluation measures will fall
upon the working-class. Therefore, to break clearly with the
neoliberal model, it is essential that the government supplement its
devaluation decision by accepting the following proposals.

Our proposals are based on four central principles:

- The organized working-class must not pay.
- The people in general must not pay.
- Capital must pay.
-  We need to take definite steps that move in the direction of socialism.

We understand that these steps necessarily will involve a combination
of long-term and immediate measures. We focus below on the first two
of these principles, as principles three and four are not separate but
must be present everywhere.

Cost-of-Living Adjustment and Transparency

1. The government has recognized the inflationary effect of
devaluation by agreeing to increase the minimum wage. However, only on
the basis of theoretical assumptions about market processes
(assumptions which are not relevant in the Venezuelan economy and
which at best are only operative in the long run), would the increase
in the minimum wage provide any protection for the organized
working-class. Accordingly, we demand a law which ensures that all
existing collective contracts must include a cost-of-living adjustment
which increases at the same rate as the minimum wage. Such a law would
establish through state action what the market will not do; it also
would act as an encouragement to workers to form trade unions and
achieve collective contracts. Of course, such a law could be an
incentive for capitalist employers not to sign collective contracts
with trade unions. Therefore the law should include a tax on all
companies without collective contracts. That tax would exceed a
cost-of-living adjustment, and distribution of part of the proceeds of
that tax would go to the trade unions for distribution among their
members. The remainder of this tax would be available for a refund to
the companies upon the signing of a collective contract. Note that all
state companies would need to comply with this law, and that ministers
would be required to report on their compliance to the vice president
of the country.

Of course, introduction of a tax upon capital is always subject to
evasion and the denial on the part of capital of its ability to pay.
Therefore, transparency is essential for taxation policy to be
effective. This transparency can be achieved in two ways: firstly, by
opening the books of the companies to the workers. Secondly, by
increasing transparency directly to the government. The easiest way
for the second would be to compel all firms which receive dollars
through CADIVI (Comisión de Administración de Divisas – Commission for
the Administration of Currency Exchange) to maintain their bank
accounts in state banks. (At present, they can place this money in any
banks that they wish – including foreign banks.)

In addition to providing government with the necessary information,
this would be an important step in ending the generation of private
profits from the people's money. As part of a general move toward
removing state support of private bank profits (including ending state
deposits in private banks), it would also reduce both the strength and
the market value of the private banks and thus would be an essential
step toward bringing the entire financial system under the control of
the government. The combination of transparency to the government and
the ability to monitor the books by the workers would prevent
capitalist blackmail.

Role of Workers Councils

2. The government has taken very important steps toward protecting
people in general from inflationary effects of devaluation. We're
referring here to restrictions on price increases, the expropriation
of the distribution chains which can serve as a government
alternative, and the clear announcement by Minister Saman that the
government intends to import goods itself to compete with the private
monopolies. These are definitely steps in the direction of
substituting state control of foreign trade for the current private
monopoly and stranglehold. We think that these measures, though, must
go beyond announcements and sporadic enforcement; we believe that they
can only be effective if combined with the initiative of people in
communities who can monitor the prices being charged and the behavior
of private distributors. Accordingly, to encourage that initiative
from below, we think that there should be legislation which enables
local communities through communal councils and communes to confiscate
goods which are being sold at excessive prices. The goods would then
be sold by the communities at a just price and the proceeds would go
to communal banks to finance local improvement and development.

This immediate combination of vigorous action from above and below is
necessary to reduce inflationary pressures as a result of devaluation.
However, in itself it does nothing to reduce the already elevated
prices of capitalist firms. We need to look at the level of profits
and their contribution to high prices, and we need to find ways to
increase the efficiency and productivity of existing enterprises in
order to make possible lower prices. Accordingly we propose opening
the books to workers councils and allowing workers councils to
introduce measures which can reduce waste and increase efficiency and
productivity. Where firms resist making this information available and
allowing workers to introduce solutions in the interests of society,
they should be taken over so they can act in the interests of society
as worker managed state-owned firms.

With these measures, which include cost-of-living adjustments for all
organized workers, ending private profits from the people's money,
opening the books of the companies, giving communities the right to
confiscate goods and to use the proceeds of their sales at just
prices, empowering workers councils to reduce inefficiency and
increase productivity and nationalizing firms which do not act in the
interest of society, we think Venezuela will both protect the
working-class from the negative effects of devaluation and also will
take clear steps in the direction of building socialism for the 21st
century. Not to act on such proposals, on the other hand, will be to
reinforce neoliberalism and the capitalist economy. •

Michael A. Lebowitz is Professor emeritus of Economics at Simon Fraser
University in Vancouver, Canada, and was the Director of the Program
in Transformative Practice and Human Development, Centro Internacional
Miranda, in Caracas, Venezuela, from 2006-11. This article was
originally prepared for UNETE at the request of Marea Socialista,
January 2010.

Venezuela Debates Currency Devaluation While Impact Remains Unclear

Ewan Robertson

There has been much debate in Venezuela over the causes and likely
consequences of last Friday's currency devaluation, while the concrete
political and economic impact remains to be seen. The Venezuelan
government's decision to devalue the Bolivar by 32%, from 4.3 to 6.3
Bolivars to the U.S. dollar, was a measure seen as inevitable by many
economists after the Bolivar fell to under a quarter of its official
value on the black market.[1]

Alongside the decision, the fifth devaluation since currency controls
were introduced in 2003, the government also announced the
establishment of a new body to oversee the allocation of dollars to
citizens and businesses.

Analysts in Venezuela have argued that the political impact of the
devaluation will depend on the success of the media campaigns of both
the government and the opposition, which are attempting to communicate
their interpretations of the currency adjustment to the country.

However, economic factors will also determine the political impact of
the devaluation, such as its effect on imports and domestic
production, increases in inflation and prices, and complimentary
government measures such as a rise in the minimum wage and the
effectiveness of price controls.

Opposition Criticisms

The opposition has launched a campaign maximizing the possible
negative effects of the devaluation, partly in an attempt to erode
support for Vice President Nicolas Maduro in the event of fresh
presidential elections if Hugo Chavez is unable to continue in office
on health grounds.

Ramon Aveledo of the opposition MUD coalition blamed the government
for the devaluation, saying, “It's due to the government's
irresponsibility and worrying incoherence.”

Opposition leaders and supporters alike nicknamed the move a “red” or
“Cuban package” in an attempt to associate the devaluation with an
IMF-style neoliberal structural adjustment package.

Julio Borges, a leader of right-wing party Justice First, said of the
devaluation: “The only ones affected are the Venezuelan people, from
whose pockets the government keeps taking money.” He pointed to a rise
in inflation and prices over the last two months, blaming this and the
devaluation on high public spending. “Now they [the government] are
going to make us pay for the consequences of their inability, waste
and poor administration,” he declared.

A short-term rise in inflation is possible after the devaluation,
because imports will be more expensive, with a concomitant effect on
prices. On the other hand, since so many imported products are sold at
prices that reflect the black market exchange rate, which is unlikely
to change as a result of the devaluation, inflation might not rise
much after all.

However, while sources such as Reuters have described a “spike” in
annual inflation to 22.2% so far this year, a rise in inflation during
and after the Christmas period is not unusual in Venezuela, and annual
inflation is still below the annual rate experienced a year ago.

Government Stance

Meanwhile, the government has highlighted the possible benefits of the
devaluation, such as bringing in more oil revenue for social spending,
helping boost domestic production, and potentially combating capital
flight.

Foreign minister and former vice president Elias Jaua argued that the
adjustment was made necessary due to the activities of a “speculator
class” within Venezuela, who acquire dollars at the official exchange
rate and then use those dollars for black market sale or to sell
imported products at black market prices. As such, Jaua defended the
devaluation and the establishment of the government's new currency
exchange body as combating speculation and capital flight.

He also described the measures as part of “economic actions taken to
protect our wealth in currency exchange, avoiding that it falls into
the torrent of capitalist voracity, and to preserve our monetary
resources for the sustainment of our socialist system of social
benefit that our President Chavez has been constructing.”

Economist and pro-government legislator Jesus Faria further argued
that the devaluation would make imports more expensive and exports
cheaper, thus making domestic production more competitive. He said
that before last Friday's devaluation there had existed “an exchange
rate lag produced by the excessive cheapening of imports and the
over-pricing of exports, which had to be corrected.”

U.S. economist Mark Weisbrot also predicted the devaluation would have
a positive impact. “The devaluation...by making imports more expensive
[will] provide a boost to import-competing industries. For this
reason, and because it reduces the black market premium and reduces
capital flight, the move will overall be good for the economy,” he
wrote.

Accusations that the devaluation represents an IMF-style “package”
were widely dismissed outside opposition circles given that the move
was not accompanied by any measures associated with neoliberal
economics, such as privatizations, salary freezes, or the removal of
subsidies.

However there have been criticisms of the move from within the
pro-Chavez camp, where some activists have argued that currency
devaluations contradict the movement's political economy and that
other measures could have been taken to address speculation on the
Bolivar.

Leftist political scientist Nicmer Evans said that the move was “not
very socialist,” because it is a measure “which affects the poorest
and the richest equally.”

“Neither devaluation nor the Value Added Tax (VAT) are socialist
measures, because they are regressive,” he added on his Twitter
account.

Ewan Robertson is a writer, journalist and activist based in
Venezuela. This areticle first appeared on the Venezuelanalysis.com
website.

Endnotes:

1. Most mainstream and financial press have reported the devaluation
figure as 32%, as has VA.com, possibly using calculations such as
this. However, others have calculated the figure at 46.5%, using a
different methodology.
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