CARACAS, Venezuela -- Panic buyers thronged Venezuelan shops over the
carnival weekend after the government of Hugo Chavez announced a
surprise devaluation that analysts said was overdue but would only
partly right the listing economy.
Domestic appliances such as fridges and cookers were in particularly
high demand as Venezuelans snapped up goods imported at the now-defunct
exchange rate of 4.3 bolvars per dollar. From now on they will be
imported at 6.3 bolvars per dollar.
Opposition politicians seized on what is Venezuela's fifth
devaluation since strict currency controls were introduced in 2003,
criticising the socialist government for springing an International
Monetary Fund-style adjustment package on the country and quietly
announcing it on Friday while people headed for the beach over the
holiday.
Although Chavez was re-elected last October after consistently warning
during his campaign that an opposition government would implement a
"neoliberal package," officials say he ordered the devaluation -- from
his hospital bed in Cuba, where he is recovering after a cancer
operation two months ago.
The move represents the biggest challenge yet for the country's vice
president, Nicolas Maduro, who has been in charge since Mr Chavez left
for Cuba and who many expect to succeed the socialist leader if he
remains too ill to continue in power. Mr Maduro defended the devaluation
as an effort to strengthen the economy by optimising revenues while
protecting the currency from "speculative attacks."
Critics say that although the exchange rate adjustment was essential
to correct growing distortions in the economy, it did not go far enough,
as the currency remains overvalued. It will therefore fail to solve the
fundamental problem that the demand for dollars will remain far greater
than the amount the government is likely to supply, they argue.
"Either the government burns up huge quantities" of its foreign
currency reserves "handing out cheap dollars or there will be
shortages," said Luis Vicente Leon, a pollster and economist at
Datanalisis.
Local economists estimate that the "equilibrium" exchange rate, at
which foreign currency is no longer relatively cheap for Venezuelans, is
about nine bolvars to the dollar.
"The big winner ends up being the state," said Asdrbal Oliveros, an
economist at the Caracas-based consultancy Ecoanalitica. The move will
relieve pressure on a fiscal deficit variously estimated between 7 and
15 per cent of gross domestic product by increasing the state's net
revenues by almost 4 per cent of GDP, or $13 billion at the new exchange
rate, according to Mr Oliveros.
The devaluation also cuts the dollar value of domestic debt from
$42.9 billion to $29.3 billion, leading analysts to expect an increase
in prices of Venezuela's foreign debt.
But while the government gains, most Venezuelans lose out, with
Ecoanalitica estimating an 8 per cent fall in consumers' purchasing
power. Until the government next decrees an increase in minimum wages,
the relative value of workers' salaries will fall.
"Those most affected, apart from consumers, are the multinational
companies that couldn't repatriate capital, and they will end up losing
from one day to the next 46.5 per cent of their funds accumulated in
bolvars," said Mr Oliveros.
Shares in companies with Venezuelan operations, including Colgate-Palmolive and Avon, fell on the announcement.
Mr Oliveros added that the devaluation was also likely to spur
inflation, which at more than 20 per cent is one of the highest in the
world, since more than a third of the goods consumed by Venezuelans are
imported, while around half of locally produced goods rely on imports
for their production.
Although, in theory, exporting companies benefit from a more
competitive exchange rate, Venezuela exports very little apart from oil,
which accounts for around 94 per cent of export revenues.
Moreover, economists point out that domestic industry is unlikely to
benefit much from the devaluation because of hostile relations between
the government and the private sector, with expropriations often not
compensated, as well as a web of economic controls.
No comments:
Post a Comment