Venezuela´s Suicide
Venezuela´s
Suicide
By: Moisés
Naim
Taken from:
Foreign Affairs
Consider
two Latin American countries. The first is one of the region’s oldest and
strongest democracies. It boasts a stronger social safety net than any of its
neighbors and is making progress on its promise to deliver free health care and
higher education to all its citizens. It is a model of social mobility and a
magnet for immigrants from across Latin America and Europe. The press is free,
and the political system is open; opposing parties compete fiercely in
elections and regularly alternate power peacefully. It sidestepped the wave of
military juntas that mired some Latin American countries in dictatorship.
Thanks to a long political alliance and deep trade and investment ties with the
United States, it serves as the Latin American headquarters for a slew of
multinational corporations. It has the best infrastructure in South America. It
is still unmistakably a developing country, with its share of corruption,
injustice, and dysfunction, but it is well ahead of other poor countries by
almost any measure.
The second
country is one of Latin America’s most impoverished nations and its newest
dictatorship. Its schools lie half deserted. The health system has been
devastated by decades of underinvestment, corruption, and neglect;
long-vanquished diseases, such as malaria and measles, have returned. Only a
tiny elite can afford enough to eat. An epidemic of violence has made it one of
the most murderous countries in the world. It is the source of Latin America’s
largest refugee migration in a generation, with millions of citizens fleeing in
the last few years alone. Hardly anyone (aside from other autocratic
governments) recognizes its sham elections, and the small portion of the media
not under direct state control still follows the official line for fear of reprisals.
By the end of 2018, its economy will have shrunk by about half in the last five
years. It is a major cocaine-trafficking hub, and key power brokers in its
political elite have been indicted in the United States on drug charges. Prices
double every 25 days. The main airport is largely deserted, used by just a
handful of holdout airlines bringing few passengers to and from the outside
world.
These two
countries are in fact the same country, Venezuela, at two different times: the
early 1970s and today. The transformation Venezuela has undergone is so
radical, so complete, and so total that it is hard to believe it took place
without a war. What happened to Venezuela? How did things go so wrong?
The short
answer is Chavismo. Under the leadership of Hugo Chávez and his successor,
Nicolás Maduro, the country has experienced a toxic mix of wantonly destructive
policy, escalating authoritarianism, and kleptocracy, all under a level of
Cuban influence that often resembles an occupation. Any one of these features
would have created huge problems on its own. All of them together hatched a
catastrophe. Today, Venezuela is a poor country and a failed and criminalized
state run by an autocrat beholden to a foreign power. The remaining options for
reversing this situation are slim; the risk now is that hopelessness will push
Venezuelans to consider supporting dangerous measures, such as a U.S.-led
military invasion, that could make a bad situation worse.
CHAVISMO
RISING
To many
observers, the explanation for Venezuela’s predicament is simple: under Chávez,
the country caught a strong case of socialism, and all its subsequent disasters
stem from that original sin. But Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, Nicaragua,
and Uruguay have also elected socialist governments in the last 20 years.
Although each has struggled politically and economically, none—aside from
Nicaragua—has imploded. Instead, several have prospered.
If
socialism cannot be blamed for Venezuela’s demise, perhaps oil is the culprit.
The most calamitous stage of Venezuela’s crisis has coincided neatly with the
sharp fall in international oil prices that started in 2014. But this
explanation is also insufficient. Venezuela’s decline began four decades ago,
not four years ago. By 2003, Venezuela’s GDP per worker had already declined by
a disastrous 37 percent from its 1978 peak—precisely the decline that first
propelled Chávez into office. Moreover, all of the world’s petrostates suffered
a serious income shock in 2014 as a result of plummeting oil prices. Only
Venezuela could not withstand the pressure.
The drivers
of Venezuela’s failure run deeper. Decades of gradual economic decline opened
the way for Chávez, a charismatic demagogue wedded to an outdated ideology, to
take power and establish a corrupt autocracy modeled on and beholden to Cuba’s
dictatorship. Although the crisis preceded Chávez’s rise to power, his legacy
and Cuba’s influence must be at the center of any attempt to explain it.
Chávez was
born in 1954 into a lower-middle-class family in a rural town. He became a
career military officer on a baseball scholarship and was soon secretly
recruited into a small leftist movement that spent over a decade plotting to
overthrow the democratic regime. He exploded into Venezuela’s national
consciousness on February 4, 1992, when he led an unsuccessful coup attempt.
This misadventure landed him in jail but turned him into an improbable folk
hero who embodied growing frustration with a decade of economic stagnation.
After receiving a pardon, he launched an outsider bid for the presidency in
1998 and won in a landslide, upending the two-party system that had anchored
Venezuelan democracy for 40 years.
What drove
the explosion of populist anger that brought Chávez to power? In a word,
disappointment. The stellar economic performance Venezuela had experienced for
five decades leading up to the 1970s had run out of steam, and the path to the
middle class had begun to narrow. As the economists Ricardo Hausmann and
Francisco Rodríguez noted, “By 1970 Venezuela had become the richest country in
Latin America and one of the twenty richest countries in the world, with a per
capita GDP higher than Spain, Greece, and Israel and only 13 percent lower than
that of the United Kingdom.” But by the early 1980s, a weakened oil market had
brought the era of fast growth to an end. Lower oil revenue meant cuts in
public spending, scaled-down social programs, currency devaluation, runaway
inflation, a banking crisis, and mounting unemployment and hardship for the
poor. Even so, Venezuela’s head start was such that when Chávez was elected, it
had a per capita income in the region that was second only to Argentina’s.
Another
common explanation for Chávez’s rise holds that it was driven by voters’
reaction against economic inequality, which was driven in turn by pervasive
corruption. But when Chávez came to power, income was more evenly distributed
in Venezuela than in any neighboring country. If inequality determined
electoral outcomes, then a Chávez-like candidate would have been more probable
in Brazil, Chile, or Colombia, where the gap between the well-off and everyone
else was larger.
Venezuela
may not have been collapsing in 1998, but it had been stagnating and, in some
respects, backsliding, as oil prices slumped to just $11 per barrel, leading to
a new round of austerity. Chávez was brilliant at mining the resulting
discontent. His eloquent denunciations of inequality, exclusion, poverty, corruption,
and the entrenched political elite struck a chord with struggling voters, who
felt nostalgic for an earlier, more prosperous period. The inept and complacent
traditional political and business elite who opposed Chávez never came close to
matching his popular touch.
Venezuelans
gambled on Chávez. What they got was not just an outsider bent on upending the
status quo but also a Latin American leftist icon who soon had followers all
around the world. Chávez became both a spoiler and the star attraction at
global summits, as well as a leader of the burgeoning global wave of
anti-American sentiment sparked by U.S. President George W. Bush’s invasion of
Iraq. At home, shaped by his career in the military, Chávez had a penchant for
centralizing power and a profound intolerance of dissent. He set out to neuter
not just opposition politicians but also political allies who dared question
his policies. His collaborators quickly saw which way the wind was blowing:
policy debates disappeared, and the government pursued a radical agenda with
little forethought and no real scrutiny.
A 2001
presidential decree on land reform, which Chávez handed down with no
consultation or debate, was a taste of things to come. It broke up large
commercial farms and turned them over to peasant cooperatives that lacked the
technical know-how, management skills, or access to capital to produce at
scale. Food production collapsed. And in sector after sector, the Chávez
government enacted similarly self-defeating policies. It expropriated
foreign-owned oil ventures without compensation and gave them to political
appointees who lacked the technical expertise to run them. It nationalized
utilities and the main telecommunications operator, leaving Venezuela with
chronic water and electricity shortages and some of the slowest Internet
connection speeds in the world. It seized steel companies, causing production
to fall from 480,000 metric tons per month before nationalization, in 2008, to
effectively nothing today. Similar results followed the seizure of aluminum
companies, mining firms, hotels, and airlines.
In one
expropriated company after another, state administrators stripped assets and
loaded payrolls with Chávez cronies. When they inevitably ran into financial
problems, they appealed to the government, which was able to bail them out. By
2004, oil prices had spiked again, filling government coffers with
petrodollars, which Chávez spent without constraints, controls, or
accountability. On top of that were the easy loans from China, which was happy
to extend credit to Venezuela in exchange for a guaranteed supply of crude oil.
By importing whatever the hollowed-out Venezuelan economy failed to produce and
borrowing to finance a consumption boom, Chávez was able to temporarily shield
the public from the impact of his disastrous policies and to retain substantial
popularity.
But not
everyone was convinced. Oil industry workers were among the first to sound the
alarm about Chávez’s authoritarian tendencies. They went on strike in 2002 and
2003, demanding a new presidential election. In response to the protests,
Chávez fired almost half of the work force in the state-run oil company and
imposed an arcane currency-exchange-control regime. The system morphed into a
cesspool of corruption, as regime cronies realized that arbitraging between the
state-authorized exchange rate and the black market could yield fortunes
overnight. This arbitrage racket created an extraordinarily wealthy elite of
government-connected kleptocrats. As this budding kleptocracy perfected the art
of siphoning off oil proceeds into its own pockets, Venezuelan store shelves
grew bare.
It was all
painfully predictable—and widely predicted. But the louder local and
international experts sounded the alarm, the more the government clung to its
agenda. To Chávez, dire warnings from technocrats were a sign that the
revolution was on the right track.
PASSING THE
TORCH
In 2011,
Chávez was diagnosed with cancer. Top oncologists in Brazil and the United
States offered to treat him. But he opted instead to search for a cure in Cuba,
the country he trusted not only to treat him but also to be discreet about his
condition. As his illness progressed, his dependence on Havana deepened, and
the mystery about the real state of his health grew. On December 8, 2012, an
ailing Chávez made one final television appearance to ask Venezuelans to make
Maduro, then vice president, his successor. For the next three months,
Venezuela was governed spectrally and by remote control: decrees emanated from
Havana bearing Chávez’s signature, but no one saw him, and speculation was rife
that he had already died. When Chávez’s death was finally announced, on March
5, 2013, the only thing that was clear amid the atmosphere of secrecy and
concealment was that Venezuela’s next leader would carry on the tradition of
Cuban influence.
Chávez had
long looked to Cuba as a blueprint for revolution, and he turned to Cuban
President Fidel Castro for advice at critical junctures. In return, Venezuela
sent oil: energy aid to Cuba (in the form of 115,000 barrels a day sold at a
deep discount) was worth nearly $1 billion a year to Havana. The relationship
between Cuba and Venezuela became more than an alliance. It has been, as Chávez
himself once put it, “a merger of two revolutions.” (Unusually, the senior
partner in the alliance is poorer and smaller than the junior partner—but so
much more competent that it dominates the relationship.) Cuba is careful to
keep its footprint light: it conducts most of its consultations in Havana
rather than Caracas.
It did not
escape anyone’s attention that the leader Chávez annointed to succeed him had
devoted his life to the cause of Cuban communism. As a teenager, Maduro joined
a fringe pro-Cuban Marxist party in Caracas. In his 20s, instead of going to
university, he sought training in Havana’s school for international cadres to
become a professional revolutionary. As Chávez’s foreign minister from 2006 to
2013, he had seldom called attention to himself: only his unfailing loyalty to
Chávez, and to Cuba, propelled his ascent to the top. Under his leadership,
Cuba’s influence in Venezuela has become pervasive. He has stacked key
government posts with activists trained in Cuban organizations, and Cubans have
come to occupy sensitive roles within the Venezuelan regime. The daily
intelligence briefs Maduro consumes, for instance, are produced not by
Venezuelans but by Cuban intelligence officers.
With Cuban
guidance, Maduro has deeply curtailed economic freedoms and erased all
remaining traces of liberalism from the country’s politics and institutions. He
has continued and expanded Chávez’s practice of jailing, exiling, or banning
from political life opposition leaders who became too popular or hard to
co-opt. Julio Borges, a key opposition leader, fled into exile to avoid being
jailed, and Leopoldo López, the opposition’s most charismatic leader, has been
moved back and forth between a military prison and house arrest. Over 100
political prisoners linger in jails, and reports of torture are common.
Periodic elections have become farcical, and the government has stripped the
opposition-controlled National Assembly of all powers. Maduro has deepened
Venezuela’s alliances with a number of anti-American and anti-Western regimes,
turning to Russia for weapons, cybersecurity, and expertise in oil production;
to China for financing and infrastructure; to Belarus for homebuilding; and to
Iran for car production.
As Maduro
broke the last remaining links in Venezuela’s traditional alliances with
Washington and other Latin American democracies, he lost access to sound economic
advice. He dismissed the consensus of economists from across the political
spectrum: although they warned about inflation, Maduro chose to rely on the
advice of Cuba and fringe Marxist policy advisers who assured him that there
would be no consequences to making up budget shortfalls with freshly minted
money. Inevitably, a devastating bout of hyperinflation ensued.
A toxic
combination of Cuban influence, runaway corruption, the dismantling of
democratic checks and balances, and sheer incompetence has kept Venezuela
locked into catastrophic economic policies. As monthly inflation rates top
three digits, the government improvises policy responses that are bound to make
the situation even worse.
ANATOMY OF
A COLLAPSE
Nearly all
oil-producing liberal democracies, such as Norway, the United Kingdom, and the
United States, were democracies before they became oil producers. Autocracies
that have found oil, such as Angola, Brunei, Iran, and Russia, have been unable
to make the leap to liberal democracy. For four decades, Venezuela seemed to
have miraculously beat these odds—it democratized and liberalized in 1958,
decades after finding oil.
But the
roots of Venezuelan liberal democracy turned out to be shallow. Two decades of
bad economics decimated the popularity of the traditional political parties,
and a charismatic demagogue, riding the wave of an oil boom, stepped into the
breach. Under these unusual conditions, he was able to sweep away the whole
structure of democratic checks and balances in just a few years.
When the
decadelong oil price boom ended in 2014, Venezuela lost not just the oil
revenue on which Chávez’s popularity and international influence had depended
but also access to foreign credit markets. This left the country with a massive
debt overhang: the loans taken out during the oil boom still had to be
serviced, although from a much-reduced income stream. Venezuela ended up with
politics that are typical of autocracies that discover oil: a predatory,
extractive oligarchy that ignores regular people as long they stay quiet and
that violently suppresses them when they protest.
The
resulting crisis is morphing into the worst humanitarian disaster in memory in
the Western Hemisphere. Exact figures for Venezuela’s GDP collapse are
notoriously difficult to come by, but economists estimate that it is comparable
to the 40 percent contraction of Syria’s GDP since 2012, following the outbreak
of its devastating civil war. Hyperinflation has reached one million percent
per year, pushing 61 percent of Venezuelans to live in extreme poverty, with 89
percent of those surveyed saying they do not have the money to buy enough food
for their families and 64 percent reporting they have lost an average of 11
kilograms (about 24 pounds) in body weight due to hunger. About ten percent of
the population—2.6 million Venezuelans—have fled to neighboring countries.
The
Venezuelan state has mostly given up on providing public services such as
health care, education, and even policing; heavy-handed, repressive violence is
the final thing left that Venezuelans can rely on the public sector to
consistently deliver. In the face of mass protests in 2014 and 2017, the
government responded with thousands of arrests, brutal beatings and torture,
and the killing of over 130 protesters.
Meanwhile,
criminal business is increasingly conducted not in defiance of the state, or
even simply in cahoots with the state, but directly through it. Drug
trafficking has emerged alongside oil production and currency arbitrage as a
key source of profits to those close to the ruling elite, with high-ranking
officials and members of the president’s family facing narcotics charges in the
United States. A small connected elite has also stolen national assets to a
unprecedented degree. In August, a series of regime-connected businessmen were
indicted in U.S. federal courts for attempting to launder over $1.2 billion in
illegally obtained funds—just one of a dizzying array of illegal scams that are
part of the looting of Venezuela. The entire southeastern quadrant of the
country has become an exploitative illegal mining camp, where desperate people
displaced from cities by hunger try their luck in unsafe mines run by criminal
gangs under military protection. All over the country, prison gangs, working in
partnership with government security forces, run lucrative extortion rackets
that make them the de facto civil -authority. The offices of the Treasury, the
central bank, and the national oil company have become laboratories where
complicated financial crimes are hatched. As Venezuela’s economy has collapsed,
the lines separating the state from criminal enterprises have all but
disappeared.
THE
VENEZUELAN DILEMMA
Whenever
U.S. President Donald Trump meets with a Latin American leader, he insists that
the region do something about the Venezuelan crisis. Trump has prodded his own
national security team for “strong” alternatives, at one point stating that
there are “many options” for Venezuela and that he is “not going to rule out
the military option.” Republican Senator Marco Rubio of Florida has similarly
flirted with a military response. Secretary of Defense James Mattis, however,
has echoed a common sentiment of the U.S. security apparatus by publicly
stating, “The Venezuelan crisis is not a military matter.” All of Venezuela’s
neighboring countries have also voiced their opposition to an armed attack on
Venezuela.
And rightly
so. Trump’s fantasies of military invasion are deeply misguided and extremely
dangerous. Although a U.S.-led military assault would likely have no problem
overthrowing Maduro in short order, what comes next could be far worse, as the
Iraqis and the Libyans know only too well: when outside powers overthrow
autocrats sitting atop failing states, open-ended chaos is much more likely to
follow than stability—let alone democracy.
Nonetheless,
the United States will continue to face pressure to find some way of arresting
Venezuela’s collapse. Each initiative undertaken so far has served only to
highlight that there is, in reality, little the United States can do. During
the Obama administration, U.S. diplomats attempted to engage the regime
directly. But negotiations proved futile. Maduro used internationally mediated
talks to neutralize massive street protests: protest leaders would call off
demonstrations during the talks, but Chavista negotiators would only stonewall,
parceling out minor concessions designed to divide their opponents while they
themselves prepared for the next wave of repression. The United States and
Venezuela’s neighbors seem to have finally grasped that, as things stand,
negotiations only play into Maduro’s hands.
Some have
suggested using harsh economic sanctions to pressure Maduro to step down. The
United States has tried this. It passed several rounds of sanctions, under both
the Obama and Trump administrations, to prevent the regime from issuing new
debt and to hamper the financial operation of the state-owned oil company.
Together with Canada and the EU, Washington has also put in place sanctions
against specific regime officials, freezing their assets abroad and imposing
travel restrictions. But such measures are redundant: if the task is to destroy
the Venezuelan economy, no set of sanctions will be as effective as the regime
itself. The same is true for an oil blockade: oil production is already in a
free fall.
Washington
can sharpen its policy on the margins. For one thing, it needs to put more
emphasis on a Cuban track: little can be achieved without Havana’s help,
meaning that Venezuela needs to be front and center in every contact Washington
and its allies have with Havana. The United States can cast a wider net in
countering corruption, preventing not just crooked officials but also their
frontmen and families from enjoying the fruits of corruption, drug trafficking,
and embezzlement. It could also work to turn the existing U.S. arms embargo
into a global one. The Maduro regime must be constrained in its authoritarian
intent with policies that communicate clearly to its cronies that continuing to
aid the regime will leave them isolated in Venezuela and that turning on the
regime is, therefore, the only way out. Yet the prospects of such a strategy
succeeding are dim.
After a
long period of dithering, the other Latin American countries are finally
grasping that Venezuela’s instability will inevitably spill across their
borders. As the center-left “pink wave” of the early years of this century
recedes, a new cohort of more conservative leaders in Argentina, Brazil, Chile,
Colombia, and Peru has tipped the regional balance against Venezuela’s
dictatorship, but the lack of actionable options bedevils them, as well.
Traditional diplomacy hasn’t worked and has even backfired. But so has
pressure. For example, in 2017, Latin American countries threatened to suspend
Venezuela’s membership in the Organization of American States. The regime
responded by withdrawing from the organization unilaterally, displaying just
how little it cares about traditional diplomatic pressure.
Venezuela’s
exasperated neighbors are increasingly seeing the crisis through the prism of
the refugee problem it has created; they are anxious to stem the flow of
malnourished people fleeing Venezuela and placing new strains on their social
programs. As a populist backlash builds against the influx of Venezuelan
refugees, some Latin American countries appear tempted to slam the door shut—a
temptation they must resist, as it would be a historic mistake that would only
worsen the crisis. The reality is that Latin American countries have no idea
what to do about Venezuela. There may be nothing they can do, save accepting
refugees, which will at least help alleviate the suffering of the Venezuelan
people.
POWER TO
THE PEOPLE
Today, the
regime is so solidly entrenched that a change of faces is much more likely than
a change of system. Perhaps Maduro will be pushed out by a slightly less
incompetent leader who is able to render Cuban hegemony in Venezuela more
sustainable. Such an outcome would merely mean a more stable foreign-dominated
petro-kleptocracy, not a return to democracy. And even if opposition forces—or
a U.S.-led armed attack—somehow managed to replace Maduro with an entirely new
government, the agenda would be daunting. A successor regime would need to
reduce the enormous role the military plays in all areas of the public sector.
It would have to start from scratch in restoring basic services in health care,
education, and law enforcement. It would have to rebuild the oil industry and
stimulate growth in other economic sectors. It would need to get rid of the
drug dealers, prison racketeers, predatory miners, wealthy criminal financiers,
and extortionists who have latched on to every part of the state. And it would have
to make all these changes in the context of a toxic, anarchic political
environment and a grave economic crisis.
Given the
scale of these obstacles, Venezuela is likely to remain unstable for a long
time to come. The immediate challenge for its citizens and their leaders, as
well as for the international community, is to contain the impact of the
nation’s decline. For all the misery they have experienced, the Venezuelan
people have never stopped struggling against misrule. As of this summer,
Venezuelans were still staging hundreds of protests each month. Most of them
are local, grass-roots affairs with little political leadership, but they show
a people with the will to fight for themselves.
Is that
enough to nudge the country away from its current, grim path? Probably not.
Hopelessness is driving more and more Venezuelans to fantasize about a
Trump-led military intervention, which would offer a fervently desired deus ex
machina for a long-suffering people. But this amounts to an ill-advised revenge
fantasy, not a serious strategy.
Rather than
a military invasion, Venezuelans’ best hope is to ensure that the flickering
embers of protest and social dissent are not extinguished and that resistance
to dictatorship is sustained. Desperate though the prospect may seem, this
tradition of protest could one day lay the foundations for the recovery of
civic institutions and democratic practices. It won’t be simple, and it won’t
be quick. Bringing a state back from the brink of failure never is.
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