PDA

View Full Version : Hugo's little socialist paradise not doing well



Jerk
2/8/2007, 07:00 PM
Meat, sugar scarce in Venezuela stores


By NATALIE OBIKO PEARSON, AP Business Writer1 hour, 1 minute ago

Meat cuts vanished from Venezuelan supermarkets this week, leaving only unsavory bits like chicken feet, while costly artificial sweeteners have increasingly replaced sugar, and many staples sell far above government-fixed prices.


President Hugo Chavez's administration blames the food supply problems on unscrupulous speculators, but industry officials say government price controls that strangle profits are responsible. Authorities on Wednesday raided a warehouse in Caracas and seized seven tons of sugar hoarded by vendors unwilling to market the inventory at the official price.


Major private supermarkets suspended sales of beef earlier this week after one chain was shut down for 48 hours for pricing meat above government-set levels, but an agreement reached with the government on Wednesday night promises to return meat to empty refrigerator shelves.


Shortages have sporadically appeared with items from milk to coffee since early 2003, when Chavez began regulating prices for 400 basic products as a way to counter inflation and protect the poor.


Yet inflation has soared to an accumulated 78 percent in the last four years in an economy awash in petrodollars, and food prices have increased particularly swiftly, creating a widening discrepancy between official prices and the true cost of getting goods to market in Venezuela.


"Shortages have increased significantly as well as violations of price controls," Central Bank director Domingo Maza Zavala told the Venezuelan broadcaster Union Radio on Thursday. "The difference between real market prices and controlled prices is very high."


Most items can still be found, but only by paying a hefty markup at grocery stores or on the black market. A glance at prices in several Caracas supermarkets this week showed milk, ground coffee, cheese and beans selling between 30 percent to 60 percent above regulated prices.


The state runs a nationwide network of subsidized food stores, but in recent months some items have become increasingly hard to find.


At a giant outdoor market held last weekend by the government to address the problems, a street vendor crushed raw sugar cane to sell juice to weary shoppers waiting in line to buy sugar.


"They say there are no shortages, but I'm not finding anything in the stores," grumbled Ana Diaz, a 70-year-old housewife who after eight hours, had managed to fill a bag with chicken, milk, vegetable oil and sugar bought at official prices. "There's a problem somewhere, and it needs to be fixed."


Gonzalo Asuaje, president of the meat processors association Afrigo, said that costs and demand have surged but in four years the government has barely raised the price of beef, which now stands at $1.82 per pound. Simply getting beef to retailers now costs $2.41 per pound without including any markup, he said.


"They want to sell it at the same price the cattle breeder gets for his cow," he said. "It's impossible."


After a meeting with government officials Wednesday, supermarkets association head Luis Rodriguez told the TV channel Globovision that beef and chicken will be available at regulated prices within two to three days. He did not say whether the government would be subsidizing sales or if negotiations on price controls would continue.


The government has urged Venezuelans to refrain from panic buying and is looking to imports to help.


Jorge Alvarado, trade secretary at the Bolivian Embassy in Caracas, told the state news agency that Venezuela's government plans to import 330 tons of Bolivian beef next week, eventually bringing that to 11,000 tons a year. It also plans to import 8,250 tons of beans, chicken, soybeans and cooking oil, Alvarado said.


Government officials dismiss any problems with price controls, while state TV has begun running tickers urging the public to "denounce the hoarders and speculators" through a toll-free phone number.


"The weight of the law will be felt, and we demand punishment," Information Minister Willian Lara said Wednesday.


Copyright © 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.



Copyright © 2007 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Questions or Comments
Privacy Policy -Terms of Service - Copyright/IP Policy - Ad Feedback
-------

One thing that communists don't understand is that the laws of economics are just as real as the laws of physics.

royalfan5
2/8/2007, 07:05 PM
Scarcity in a socialist country? Next thing you'll tell me is that Oklahoma State is a traditional football power.

Widescreen
2/8/2007, 07:25 PM
President Hugo Chavez's administration blames the food supply problems on unscrupulous speculators
I'm shocked. Ordinarily he'd blame imperialist America and Satan Bush.

RUSH LIMBAUGH is my clone!
2/8/2007, 07:39 PM
Venezuela is becoming ripe for one of their revolutions, and are long overdue.

jacru
2/8/2007, 08:20 PM
socialist paradise is a oxymoron.

TheHumanAlphabet
2/8/2007, 08:23 PM
Congress and the Dems better take heed if they go forward with the "windfall profits" tax on Petroleum companies. They will cut back production if taxed confiscatorily and if they start to do that, then new projects won't be initiated and then we will have a real supply problem.

Just sayin'

Jerk
2/8/2007, 09:35 PM
Congress and the Dems better take heed if they go forward with the "windfall profits" tax on Petroleum companies. They will cut back production if taxed confiscatorily and if they start to do that, then new projects won't be initiated and then we will have a real supply problem.

Just sayin'

I don't think they understand that concept. I mean, the same also works with tax rates and hand-outs. If taxes get too high in order to pay for a gracious "safety net," then at some point it just isn't even worth getting a job and working. On the bright side, the whole system collapses like a deck of cards.

crawfish
2/9/2007, 08:33 AM
If only they'd give him more power, then none of this would happen...

FaninAma
2/9/2007, 11:58 AM
Let them drink oil.

Aren't price controls wonderful?

I can't wait until the US finally gets access to cheap Canadian drugs. :D

SoonerStormchaser
2/9/2007, 11:59 AM
Just goes to show what the pansy assed socialists know.

Chavez is more a laughingstock than a threat. He's a gnat!

Widescreen
2/9/2007, 01:03 PM
None of this matters. Even when this experiment crashes and burns, the socialist sympathizers will once again say "it's not the system, it's the person controlling the system". Socialism just hasn't found the right person to run it yet. Cuz then it would REALLY be a paradise.

Vaevictis
2/9/2007, 01:09 PM
I can't wait until the US finally gets access to cheap Canadian drugs. :D

We already have price controls on drugs in this country. They're called patents.

The difference is that in Canada, the government sets a maximum; here, we let companies (not the market!) set a floor.

TUSooner
2/9/2007, 01:18 PM
We see again that economic liberty is INSEPARABLE from personal liberty.
It will be shown more clearly when Tio Hugo starts persecuting those "unscrupulous speculators" who will look an awful lot like poor pig or chicken farmers trying to make enough money feed & clothe their families.

I'll never understand the lure of socialism. Yes, I will: I like a free lunch, too. But I know there ain't no such thing.

OklahomaTuba
2/9/2007, 01:52 PM
We already have price controls on drugs in this country. They're called patents.

The difference is that in Canada, the government sets a maximum; here, we let companies (not the market!) set a floor.

No wonder Canada is such a haven for medical & drug research.

If the government tried to copy what's happening in Canada, it would be a disaster, which Canada's health care system is ironically.

Bourbon St Sooner
2/9/2007, 02:09 PM
For better relations with Venezuela: Elect John Edwards!

Vaevictis
2/9/2007, 02:16 PM
No wonder Canada is such a haven for medical & drug research.

Heh, the disparity obviously has nothing to do with the massive amounts of funding our government pumps into funding every year, right? The NIH alone accounts for something like 1/3 of all medical research funding in the USA, iirc, which doesn't include any of the fed's auxiliary efforts, or any state level efforts.


If the government tried to copy what's happening in Canada, it would be a disaster, which Canada's health care system is ironically.

Never said Canada's is better, just saying that we have our own version of price controls here. The main difference is that Canada's keep them artificially low, and ours keep them artificially high.