People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII No. 09 March 02, 2003 |
Venezuela:
A
Battle
Just
Begun
C
P
Chandrasekhar
THE
strike
by
Venezuela’s
capitalist
class,
aimed
at
unseating
president
Hugo
Chavez
ended
on
February
2.
For
two
months
prior
to
that
date,
Venezuela’s
industry,
especially
its
all-too-crucial
oil
sector,
had
downed
shutters
as
part
of
an
initiative
led
by
the
private
sector.
That
general
strike,
in
turn,
had
come
as
the
culmination
of
18
months
of
unrest,
fomented
periodically
by
a
capitalist-led
opposition.
Having
chosen
to
ride
the
storm,
despite
the
extreme
economic
disruption
it
caused,
Chavez
has
won
a
major
victory
in
a
battle
that
had
been
joined
by
imperialism’s
many
arms
in
Latin
America:
the
domestic
industrial
sector,
international
capital,
developed
country
governments
and
the
mainstream
international
media.
Capitalist
and
right-wing
anger
against
Chavez
has
a
long
history.
When
in
1992,
as
a
Lieutenant
Colonel
in
the
army,
he
led
an
unsuccessful
coup
to
dislodge
the
then
government,
his
strong
left
predilections
have
been
known.
Subsequently,
Chavez
had
been
elected
president
on
a
radical
platform
in
1998,
with
a
56
per
cent
mandate
from
a
people
who
had
tired
of
the
inequalising
economic
policies
of
governments
that
ruled
the
country
for
four
decades
since
1958,
and
delivered
inflation
and
unemployment,
but
little
growth.
Chavez
used
this
support
to
launch
his
Bolivarian
revolution
and
replaced
the
1961
constitution
with
what
the
conservative
Economist
has
described
as
“a
left-leaning
and
state-centred
charter”.
But
winning
a
democratic
mandate,
Chavez
and
the
world
realised
soon,
could
only
be
the
first
step
in
the
long
road
to
a
people-centred
economic
policy.
His
principal
task
has
been
to
face
up
to
the
campaign
to
dislodge
him
by
declaring
him
an
eccentric
autocrat
with
little
popular
support
and
inadequate
capacity
to
manage
the
economy,
who
would
be
dumped
by
foreign
capital
and
therefore
be
responsible
for
a
collapse
of
the
Venezuelan
economy.
OIL ABUNDANCE
Those
who
made
these
allegations
failed
to
take
account
of
one
reality.
Venezuela
is
by
no
means
among
the
poorest
countries
of
the
world.
With
income
per
head
in
2001
estimated
at
5,073
dollars
at
market
exchange
rates,
it
ranks
among
the
better-off
developing
countries.
It
also
has
the
largest
oil
reserves
in
the
Western
hemisphere,
with
production
estimated
at
3.1
million
barrels
per
day
(bpd),
of
which,
under
OPEC
quotas,
2.6
million
bpd
are
exported.
With
oil
prices
prevailing
at
levels
at
which
they
have
stood
in
recent
months,
this
should
ensure
a
comfortable
balance
of
payments
position.
And
since
reserves
are
estimated
at
78
billion
barrels,
Venezuela
has
more
than
60
years
in
which
it
can
use
the
benefits
offered
by
its
oil
reserve
to
restructure
its
economy.
Restructuring
is
of
course
imperative.
The
advantage
of
oil
abundance
is
also
Venezuela’s
principal
weakness.
It
has
encouraged
the
elite
which
has
ruled
the
country
to
free
ride
on
oil,
maintain
an
open
economy
and
invest
little
in
developing
agriculture
and
industry.
Oil
still
accounts
for
more
than
a
quarter
of
GDP,
half
of
government
revenues
and
three
quarters
of
exports,
showing
the
economy’s
extreme
dependence
on
this
sector.
While
this
failure
to
use
oil
to
spur
development
in
other
sectors
was
understandable
till
1975,
which
was
when
the
foreign
oil
companies
were
nationalised
and
the
state-owned
Petroleos
de
Venezuela
(PdVSA)
came
to
control
oil
exploration,
production
and
refining,
the
persistence
of
this
structure
for
the
next
30
years
is
a
clear
sign
of
developmental
failure.
In
fact
the
failure
to
use
the
opportunity
offered
by
oil
reserves
had
a
damaging
effect
when
oil
prices
fell
in
the
late
1990s
and
the
country
found
itself
mired
in
recession.
It
was
the
disillusionment
that
experience
gave
rise
to
that
brought
Chavez
to
power.
The
Venezuelan
elite
not
only
failed
to
use
oil
to
restructure
the
economy,
it
also
failed
to
use
the
benefits
from
the
oil
reserve
to
redress
the
extreme
inequalities
that
characterise
most
Latin
American
economies.
Despite
Venezuela’s
high
per
capita
income,
when
unemployment
soared
during
the
recession
of
the
late
1990s,
the
percentage
of
people
identified
as
being
below
the
poverty
line
rose
from
30
to
50
per
cent.
Recent
data
on
income
distribution
in
Venezuela
suggests
that
just
as
in
Brazil
and
Chile,
the
richest
10
per
cent
of
the
Venezuelan
population
accounts
for
close
to
45
per
cent
of
the
country’s
income.
The
programme
of
“macroeconomic
restructuring”
which
Venezuela,
like
many
other
Latin
American
countries
adopted
on
IMF
prodding
in
order
to
bring
inflation
under
control,
only
worsened
the
position
of
the
poor.
Despite
improved
oil
prices,
unemployment
averaged
14
per
cent
in
2001.
It
is
such
extreme
inequality
that
provides
the
seeds
for
a
strong
left
surge
in
Latin
American
countries
with
relatively
high
per
capita
incomes,
resulting
in
left
leaning
regimes
in
Ecuador,
Peru
and
Brazil,
besides
Venezuela.
But
long
used
to
dominating
the
system
with
autocratic
rulers,
Latin
America’s
elites
have
not
been
known
to
adjust
to
the
needs
of
democracy
or
accept
the
popular
verdict
when
it
moves
to
the
left.
Among
the
many
moves
they
adopt,
one
which
has
gained
currency
since
the
time
of
Allende,
is
a
strike
by
the
owners
of
capital
against
a
government
biased
in
favour
of
the
workers
and
the
poor.
This
is
precisely
what
has
been
attempted
in
Venezuela
where
besides
a
failed
coup
aimed
at
displacing
him,
Chavez
has
faced
4
major
strike
actions
on
the
part
of
capital.
The
most
recent,
which
began
on
December
2
has,
however,
pushed
sections
of
capital
into
bankruptcy,
leading
to
a
gradual
end
to
the
strike.
That
end
would
have
come
earlier,
but
for
the
strength
the
strike
action
gained
because
of
the
alliance
of
managers
and
workers
in
the
oil
industry,
who
in
Chavez’s
view
constitute
a
labour
aristocracy
which
has
joined
the
elites
in
the
drive
to
bleed
the
system.
Seeing
themselves
as
above
the
government,
oil-industry
managers
were
irked
by
the
fact
that
Chavez
attempted
to
gain
influence
over
PdVSA
by
appointing
Alfredo
Riera,
a
close
associate,
to
the
board.
As
a
first
response
seven
directors
on
the
board
resigned.
Subsequently,
managers
and
workers
joined
the
strike,
as
a
result
of
which
oil
production
fell
from
3
million
bpd
to
200,000
bpd.
CHAVEZ STICKS TO RADICAL AGENDA
What
is
most
noteworthy
is
that
in
the
midst
of
all
this
Chavez
has
won
out
by
sticking
to
his
radical
agenda,
which
includes
land
reform,
regulation
of
goods
and
capital
markets
and
nationalisation.
The
sustained
opposition
to
Chavez
and
the
constant
political
and
economic
disruption
at
home
did
slow
down
his
effort
to
push
ahead
with
the
Bolivarian
revolution.
The
opposition
took
many
forms.
Demonstrations,
strikes,
international
pressure
and
a
media
campaign
that
suggested
that
Chavez
had
lost
all
support.
To
bolster
the
view
of
loss
in
support,
declared
quite
recently
as
being
down
to
30
per
cent,
the
domestic
and
international
media
constantly
referred
to
a
set
of
polls.
It
is
now
known
that
these
polls
were
conducted
by
two
firms,
Datanalisis
and
Keeler
and
Associates,
which
are
headed
by
anti-Chavez
propagandists.
In
fact,
Gil
Yepes
who
heads
Datanalisis
has
been
reported
by
the
Los
Angeles
Times
as
saying
that
only
the
assassination
of
Chavez
can
solve
Venezuela’s
problems.
There
has
been
no
section
of
the
conservative
international
media
that
has
not
pushed
the
view
that
Chavez
has
little
support,
with
rather
peculiar
consequences.
Thus
The
Economist
reported
in
a
story
datelined
December
10,
2002,
that
Chavez
is
“still
backed
by
one
Venezuelan
in
four.”
More
recently,
after
the
lifting
of
the
strike,
in
a
story
datelined
February
6,
2003,
the
journal
declared
that
the
opposition
“underestimated
Mr
Chávez,
who
probably
still
enjoys
the
support
of
one
Venezuelan
in
three.”
That
was
indeed
a
concession
made
with
a
sense
of
despair.
ELITE’S
OFFENSIVE
What
is
surprising
is
that
Venezuela’s
elite
had
bought
its
own
propaganda,
and
believed
that
Chavez
actually
had
the
support
of
only
a
few
lumpen
elements.
Even
when
this
was
proved
wrong
by
the
quick
reversal
of
the
April
2002
coup
which
momentarily
brought
Pedro
Carmona
to
power,
the
business-led
opposition
was
not
convinced,
leading
to
the
strife
that
has
followed.
As
has
been
commented
by
a
number
of
political
observers,
including
Fidel
Castro,
what
is
surprising
is
the
fact
that,
on
return
to
power
in
April
2002,
Chavez
refrained
from
seeking
revenge,
and
allowed
the
plotters
of
the
coup
and
their
supporters
in
the
oil
industry
to
continue
with
their
campaign.
He
even
joined
negotiations,
led
by
the
secretary-general
of
the
Organisation
of
American
States,
to
seek
a
peaceful
end
to
the
stand-off
between
the
government
and
the
business-led
opposition.
The
most
damaging
offensive
was
of
course
the
near-closure
of
PdVSA.
This
not
merely
resulted
in
domestic
fuel
shortages,
but
the
stoppage
of
exports
and
the
loss
of
much
needed
foreign
exchange,
to
the
tune
of
$4
billion.
The
Venezuelan
Bolivar
fell
from
an
end-2002
peak
of
close
to
800-to-the-dollar
to
close
to
2000-to-the-dollar.
And
despite
the
recent
victory,
restoring
growth
in
the
economy
is
bound
to
take
time,
even
if
the
projection
of
a
20
per
cent
decline
in
GDP
this
year,
on
top
of
an
8.5
per
cent
decline
last
year,
is
a
gross
exaggeration.
Chavez
held
out
and
having
won
the
battle
is
putting
in
place
new
leaders
and
workers
in
the
oil
industry
and
refusing
to
take
back
5000
sacked
workers,
is
working
to
restore
oil
production
levels
that
are
inching
towards
2
million
bpd
and
has
suspended
currency
trading
as
a
first
measure
to
stop
the
fall
in
reserves
and
the
decline
of
the
Bolivar.
But
things
are
not
going
to
stop
there.
Having
won
the
prolonged
battle
that
the
two
month
strike
signified,
he
has
with
him
the
social
sanction
to
push
ahead
with
his
Bolivarian
agenda.
He
has
already
called
for
price
controls
on
basic
commodities,
to
protect
his
constituency
of
the
poor
from
the
most
ravaging
effects
of
inflation.
He
has
decided
to
use
exchange
controls
to
prevent
a
financial
crisis
resulting
from
capital
flight.
He
has
fixed
the
value
of
the
Bolivar
at
a
level
well
above
the
rate
which
prevailed
on
the
last
day
of
free
trading.
And
indications
are
that
he
would
soon
be
redressing
inequalities
in
asset-holding,
particularly
that
of
land.
If
this
agenda
is
extended,
we
can
expect
the
shaping
of
an
egalitarian,
domestic-market
centred
development
programme
that
runs
counter
to
the
neo-liberal
strategy
that
dominates
policy
making
in
most
of
Latin
America.
If
Chavez
does
move
ahead,
in
a
context
when
left-leaning
regimes
have
come
to
power
in
a
number
of
Latin
American
countries,
the
war
against
neo-liberal
policies
and
corporate
globalisation
would
witness
an
advance
and
the
geo-politics
of
the
region
is
bound
to
change.
Chavez
and
his
supporters
are
conscious
of
this.
Eliecer
Otaiza,
an
adviser
to
the
president,
is
reported
to
have
declared:
“The
happy
society
we
want
to
create
is
in
order
to
change...the
system
of
production
and
trade
and
the
international
political
system.”
With
the
US
being
a
neighbour
and
dependent
on
the
region,
as
Venezuela’s
contribution
of
close
to
15
per
cent
of
US
oil
imports
suggests,
this
shift
would
not
go
unchallenged.
The
battle
has
only
just
begun.