What's new

Venezuela Raises Price of Gas:First Time In 17 Years

C130

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Aug 1, 2014
Messages
8,092
Reaction score
-1
Country
United States
Location
United States
Venezuela hikes gas prices for first time in nearly 17 years - Yahoo News

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Venezuela's government is raising gasoline prices sixtyfold — the first increase of any kind in more than 17 years as the country struggles with an economic collapse. Yet drivers will still be able to fill their tanks for pennies.

Related Stories
  1. Venezuela opposition on mission to oust president AFP
  2. Venezuela leader gets emergency powers, rivals vow ouster AFP
  3. Venezuela top court grants Maduro economic emergency powers, opposition cries foul Reuters
  4. Venezuela cautiously hopeful for rise in oil price AFP
President Nicolas Maduro announced Wednesday that he was increasing the price of gas as part of a series of measures designed to help with the falling price of oil, which makes up 95 percent of Venezuela's export earnings.

He raised the price of 95-octane gasoline from .097 bolivars a liter to 6 bolivars per liter, and 91-octane gasoline from 0.07 bolivars to 1 bolivar per liter.

The hike may have symbolic importance, but gas still remains virtually free in Venezuela. Calculated at the widely used black market currency exchange rate, the price per gallon will be a few U.S. cents. In contrast, a beer costs around 300 bolivars while a basket of strawberries costs about 800 bolivars.

Maduro said the increased gasoline revenue will go to finance the government's social programs.

The socialist president had been talking about hiking gas prices for more than a year. It's a touchy issue in Venezuela, where memories are still vivid from 1989 riots in Caracas that erupted after the proposal of a series of austerity measures including a hike in gas prices.

View gallery

A man fills his scooter with fuel at a gas station in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2016. …
The move comes as Maduro is under threat from a strengthened political opposition.

Earlier in the day, two-time opposition presidential candidate Henrique Capriles called for a referendum on recalling Maduro. Capriles, who leads the more moderate wing of Venezuela's opposition, had previously stopped short of calling for Maduro's ouster.

Maduro has been on a collision course with opposition leaders since critics of Venezuela's socialist government took control of Congress in January for the first time in more than a decade. Last week, the Supreme Court overturned the one decision Congress had made since being sworn in — its attempt to deny Maduro emergency powers to deal with the economy.

Congress has been weighing several options for removing Maduro from office, including shortening his term, and calling a constitutional referendum. But many fear the Supreme Court, which has not ruled against the executive branch since the late President Hugo Chavez took office in 1999, would simply overturn these efforts.

A voter referendum might be a longer and more risky path, but Capriles said it was one the government would be forced to recognize.

"Now is the time. They will not be able to overturn a referendum," said Capriles, a governor who narrowly lost to Maduro in the last presidential election in 2013.

Maduro's approval ratings have languished in the 20 percent range for most of his term, but a recall battle would be complicated. To force a recall referendum, the opposition would need to gather nearly 4 million signatures. And if a referendum was held, the president would be removed only if the number of anti-Maduro votes exceeded the number of votes he got in the 2013 election.
 
.
So instead of it costing almost nothing to fill up your car. now it'll cost you ust little a more than nothing (still less than a penny)

the official rate of the bolivar to the dollar is 6.3 so that 1 bolivar per liter would seem expensive, but on the black market a USD fetches 1,000 times that much in bolivars
rate2.jpg

DolarToday | Noticias de Venezuela y Dolar paralelo
 
.
The hike may have symbolic importance, but gas still remains virtually free in Venezuela. Calculated at the widely used black market currency exchange rate, the price per gallon will be a few U.S. cents. In contrast, a beer costs around 300 bolivars while a basket of strawberries costs about 800 bolivars.

...

Maduro said the increased gasoline revenue will go to finance the government's social programs.

Uh...like what...buying everybody a basket of strawberries each year?
 
.
Uh...like what...buying everybody a basket of strawberries each year?
sad thing is this whole mess benefits the wealthy Venezuelans (including Maduro and his nepotism) the poor are paid in bolivars that aren't worth anything.

Chavez and now Maduro his hand picked successor, keep upping the minimum wage, but inflation and soon to be hyperinflation just laughs back at this inept government.


:rofl::rofl:
 
.
sad thing is this whole mess benefits the wealthy Venezuelans (including Maduro and his nepotism) the poor are paid in bolivars that aren't worth anything.

Chavez and now Maduro his hand picked successor, keep upping the minimum wage, but inflation and soon to be hyperinflation just laughs back at this inept government.


:rofl::rofl:

As I have mentioned before the wife of a guy I work with is from Venezuela. When they go down they fear for their lives when driving the streets. They say the streets are full of people who stare you down.
 
. .
Deutsche Bank: Venezuela needs $200 oil to balance budget - Business Insider

Venezuela is on the brink of economic collapse.

According to The Washington Post, its currency has lost 93% of its black-market value in two years, and the nation is running out of beer and toilet paper.

The country is dependent on its inefficient oil-producing infrastructure for money, and its budget has been wiped out by low oil prices.

That's bad news for a centrally planned economy like Venezuela's.

Oil started to fall like a stone in 2014, from triple figures to about $30 this year, after OPEC refused to cut production as demand fell, causing a supply glut.

But even if oil returned to about $100 a barrel, as it was midway through 2014, the country wouldn't be able to escape its economic hole. It needs double that.

Analysts at Deutsche Bank have taken a look at the countries worst hit by falling oil prices. Here's a quote from the note:

Of the top five most vulnerable countries, four are either net energy exporters, or heavily reliant on energy: Venezuela, Colombia, Argentina, Brazil (Ukraine is the exception). Realistically, these countries would remain vulnerable regardless of a moderately higher oil price.

To balance Venezuela's budget, for example, requires oil closer to $200 than $100.

Venezuela this week signed up to an agreement with Saudi Arabia and Russia to freeze oil production at January levels. That output level is still too high to move prices up. What it really needs is a cut, and a big one at that.

According to Deutsche Bank, supply from the US will tighten, though it will take time and will probably not drop enough to help Venezuela.

Here's the chart:

us%20oil%20supply.png





socialism works guys trust me
 
. .
venezuela went through 17 years of chavizmo to end up like cuba


you can bet Chavez and friends have smuggled $$billions into Cuba.

once it's game over they are going to just fly to Cuba and live the good life :wave:
 
.
the great socialist heaven is predicting an inflation of 700% this year..the bubble finally bust!

you can bet Chavez and friends have smuggled $$billions into Cuba.

once it's game over they are going to just fly to Cuba and live the good life :wave:
Chavez is dead! long live socialism!
 
.
ft-chavez-oro2.jpg



I showed those Gringos. I bought gold with their imperialist dollar, and then I took the gold out of their central banks and brought them back to the fatherland for safe keeping

now two thirds of Venezuela foreign reserves are in those gold bars, and they are selling them back off for imperialist dollars

kinda ironic right.

Venezuela Exported 36t Of Its Official Gold Reserves To Switzerland In January
 
Last edited:
.

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom