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Bacchus4.0

(6,837 posts)
Tue Sep 15, 2015, 03:06 PM Sep 2015

How Does Venezuela Compare To The World's Worst Managed Economies?

http://www.forbes.com/sites#/sites/nathanielparishflannery/2015/09/14/how-does-venezuela-compare-to-the-worlds-worst-managed-economies/?utm_campaign=yahootix&partner=yahootix

Outside of Venezuela, around the world, controlling inflation is seen as the primary concern of most central bankers. In the economic crises of the 1970s and 1980s inflation soared in as a series of economic shocks rocked Latin America. During a hyperinflation crisis in Peru in 1990 prices doubled every two weeks after the government embarked on a spending spree. Likewise, in Nicaragua, prices soared in the late eighties as the revolutionary Sandinista government tried to bolster the country’s war-ravaged economy with an aggressive program of expansionary fiscal policy. Looking at the deleterious effects of these periods of hyperinflation, the region’s central bankers have made stamping out inflation and promoting economic stability their number one priority. Latin America, with its longstanding and heavy reliance on natural resource exports, is remarkably vulnerable to boom and bust cycles as commodity prices rise and fall. Today, successful economies in Latin America focus on responsible macroeconomic management and work to promote economic stability. Even revolutionary leaders such as Evo Morales in Bolivia have adopted conservative macroeconomic management policies and eschewed irresponsible, short-term spending binges in favor of programs designed to create sustainable growth. So, looking at the list of the world’s worst performing economies in terms of inflation management a few things stand out.



The fact that Venezuela tops the list should come as no surprise. The South American nation has become a poster child for macroeconomic mismanagement. President Nicolas Maduro, the unfortunate successor to populist icon Hugo Chavez, has inherited a deeply unbalanced economy, and has resorted to desperate PR stunts such as jailing opposition leaders and blaming inflation on business owners rather than working to address the country’s underlying economic problems.

As I explained in a recent article, Venezuela’s economy faces crushing pressure from falling oil prices and the accumulated weight of decades of economic mismanagement. The country’s currency, the bolivar, is preposterously overvalued and yet Venezuela’s economy continues to be shackled under a three-tiered system of arcane and nonsensical currency controls.



According to some estimates, Venezuela’s unofficial exchange rate with the U.S. dollar now tops 700. According to a forecast from FocusEconomics, this year Venezuela’s economy will contract by more than 6%, the worst performance for any major Latin American economy. Multinational companies operating in Venezuela are caught in a squeeze. The currency controls make it challenging to buy materials and run their operations. At the same time, every time Venezuela raised its laughably over-valued exchange rate, companies such as Ford, GM, and Merck have seen their balance sheets hurt.
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How Does Venezuela Compare To The World's Worst Managed Economies? (Original Post) Bacchus4.0 Sep 2015 OP
Well, Zimbabwe is pretty bad. Nt HooptieWagon Sep 2015 #1
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