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flamingdem

(39,316 posts)
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 12:33 PM Mar 2013

The Caribbean after Chavez - 17 Caribbean countries may be impacted


and we can add the United States due to the help Chavez gave to the poor here.


http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/columns/The-Caribbean-after-Chavez_13805900

Seventeen countries of the Caribbean face a heightened period of economic uncertainty now that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has died. Twelve of the 17 Caribbean countries are members of the Caribbean Community (Caricom). They have become highly reliant on their oil supplies from Venezuela on a part payment-part loan scheme, called PetroCaribe, without which their difficult economic circumstances would be decidedly worse.

Of the $14-billion worth of oil that Venezuela provided under PetroCaribe to the 17 dependent countries up to last year, $5.8 billion constituted long-term financing. Cuba is the principal beneficiary but, in per capita terms, so too are a number of Caricom countries — Jamaica particularly.

The attendant ALBA Caribe Fund (ACF) and ALBA Food Fund (AFF) -- both financed almost entirely by Venezuela — are also significant contributors to the welfare of the beneficiary states. In six years up to 2012, the ACF had invested $178.8 million in 88 projects ranging from education to water. In nine countries, the AFF had invested in 12 projects worth $24 million.

These were Hugo Chavez's personal projects. He carried his Government along, but the ideas and their execution were entirely of his making. There are many theories about Chavez's motivation. One is that he wished to exercise control over reliant Caribbean countries in his passion to contest the influence of the US Government and US companies in Latin America. Another is that he was genuinely concerned about the plight of the poor in all these countries and wanted to alleviate their suffering. It was very probably a mixture of both.



Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/columns/The-Caribbean-after-Chavez_13805900#ixzz2NFWyE0kF


Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/columns/The-Caribbean-after-Chavez_13805900#ixzz2NFWpHeFz
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