Despotism and default in Venezuela
BACK in July, Nicolás Maduro’s big
problem was an opposition-backed rebellion against his plan to replace
Venezuela’s elected parliament with a hand-picked constituent assembly. More
than 120 people died in mass protests and the armed forces briefly seemed to
waver in their support for the government. Now Venezuela’s dictator-president
has his new assembly in place and the opposition where he wants it—divided and
debilitated. But he has another problem: he is running out of cash. After years
of mismanagement, Venezuela’s all-important oil industry is listing like a
shipwrecked tanker. According to data provided by the government to OPEC, oil
production in October averaged 1.96m barrels per day (b/d), down 130,000 b/d
from September (and 361,000 b/d from October 2016). Subtract oil supplied for
almost nothing to Venezuelans and to Cuba, and shipments to repay loans from
China and Russia, and only around 750,000 b/d are sold for cash, according to
Francisco Monaldi, More…
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