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Article Courtesy from
Trust Services S.A.
News Letter From Trust Services S.A.
VENEZUELA: RISING WATERS
A year after Christopher Columbus discovered Venezuela in 1498, Alonso de
Ojeda found Lake Maracaibo and he was intrigued to find houses built on stilts
in the lake prompting him to call the area “little Venice” or Venezuela. In 2002
I wrote in a newsletter that president Chávez appeared to have tempered his
Bolivarian revolutionary reform programme in a move perhaps towards the use of
more intellectual solutions, using think-tanks instead of army tanks, but that
it was still unclear whether the country could keep its head, like the houses by
the lake, above water. The picture remains unclear, but what is certain is that
the water is rising. There is an increasing awareness in Latin America of a
clash between liberal democracy and populism and there is no greater proponent
of the latter than Hugo Chávez. His closest ally is Fidel Castro and
he has proudly declared himself a Fidelista, a follower of Fidel Castro.
The United States of America is alarmed by such
developments after having spent decades trying to ensure that South America
would not have another Cuba. Bolstered by his success in a recall referendum in
2004 and high oil prices, Hugo Chávez has attempted to spread his “Bolivarian
revolution”, named after the president’s hero, Simon Bolivar, throughout the
region. General Bolivar defeated the Spanish army in a protracted war between
1810 and 1821 and became known as El Libertador (the liberator) who created
Greater Colombia which at one time comprised Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador,
Bolivia, Panama and Peru. The General’s military skills were far greater than
his political abilities, however, and although he dominated Venezuelan affairs
until 1820, he was replaced by an illiterate but cunning rebel general, José
Antonio Paez. Hugo Chávez has appealed to the masses with his economic vision
and has not concentrated on the slow but steady strengthening of institutions
that creates the conditions that lead to permanent growth in investment. Charles
de Gaulle once observed that “in order to become the master, the politician
poses as the servant”. Many observers are in no doubt that the remark applies to
the Venezuelan president who presides over a political system that concentrates
power but which has no checks and balances in place.
Today, Hugo Chávez exercises personal control over
Venezuela’s main institutions, including the armed forces, state radio and
television as well as the state oil monopoly. His own political party, The Fifth
Republic Movement, plays a secondary role and the backbone of his support comes
from the armed forces; a high number of serving and retired officers hold key
positions in his administration. Venezuela is concentrating on trade and
investment deals with several countries including Iran, Russia and China while
relations with Washington are becoming more distant. The USA receives
approximately 60% of Venezuela’s crude oil exports at present but Venezuela now
has an accord with China. The accord allows China to purchase 120,000 barrels of
fuel oil per month and permits Chinese companies to help pump oil out of 15
Venezuelan oil fields. Once the Chinese have the refineries capable of
processing Venezuela’s heavy crude oil, how much of the supply currently sent
north will be diverted to China?
This backdrop has made Washington look askance at all the
other left-wing governments in Latin America, namely, Argentina, Brazil, Chile
and Uruguay. They, too, in varying degrees, have embraced business with China, a
country which has encroached within Washington’s historical sphere of influence.
One political observer believes that November, 2004, will be viewed by future
historians as the seminal moment when China’s economic power changed the global
political balance. That was the month that Hu Jintao, the president of China,
toured Latin America on a commodities shopping spree and, at the same time, made
alliances with governments that are not particularly comfortable with president
Bush.
It would be a mistake, however, to look at South America’s
other left-wing governments and see the face of Hugo Chávez because there is a
distinction to be made. The government headed by Hugo Chávez has more of the
characteristics of the military regimes that leftist governments south of
Caracas vigorously opposed in their fight for democracy. Their source of
inspiration is more likely to have been Adam Smith’s doctrine of free enterprise
rather than the revolutionary convictions of the late and legendary Che Guevara,
the Argentinean-born doctor who was also a staunch ally of Fidel Castro. Not
unlike Hugo Chávez, Che Guevara dreamt of social revolution and proceeded to
launch one in Bolivia, only to be injured in a gun battle and afterwards
executed by Bolivian troops backed by America’s Central Intelligence Agency.
There is some concern that the Venezuelan president is also encouraging
Bolivians to take a revolutionary path as rumours circulate that he is financing
left-wing opposition in that country.
Oil has buoyed the Venezuelan president’s
belligerence towards Washington. Crude oil has produced crude politics but
things change and the present Venezuelan situation should not be allowed to
affect the long-term strategy for future regional relationships. The Chinese
take the long view and their president’s November, 2002, trip to Latin America
was part of that philosophy. No wonder Zhou Enlai, China’s prime minister from
1949 to 1976, when asked about the effect of the French Revolution on world
history is reported to have answered: “It’s too early to tell”. That’s certainly
the case with the Bolivarian Revolution.
Offshore Pilot Quarterly has been published since 1997 by
Trust Services, S. A.
which is a British- managed trust company licensed under the banking laws of
Panama. It is written by our Managing Director who is a former member of the
Latin America and Caribbean Banking Commission as well as a former offshore
banking and insurance regulator. He has over 35 years private and public sector
experience in the financial services industry. Our website provides a broad
range of related essays.
Engaging an offshore representative is an important decision and we advise all
persons to seek appropriate legal and tax advice from professionals licensed to
render such advice before making offshore commitments.
Article Courtesy of Trust Services S.A.
Physical Address: Suite 522, Balboa Plaza, Avenida Balboa, Panama, Republic of
Panama.
Mailing Address: Apartado 0832-1630, World Trade Centre, Panama, Republic of
Panama.
Telephone: +(507) 269-2438 – Telefax: + (507) 269-4922
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