Abstract

Venezuela, endowed with abundant oil resources, was one of the wealthiest countries in Latin America, with a promising future. However, Venezuela’s economic condition has dramatically deteriorated in recent years, with the country experiencing hyperinflation and a major recession in 2016. The popular view is that Venezuela suffers from the “Dutch disease,” in which a government develops an unsustainable reliance on natural resource exports at the expense of other sectors, making the economies increasingly susceptible to volatile global oil prices and capital flights. This study compares economic data from oil-dependent countries around the world and reveals that the “Dutch disease” theory can only explain Venezuela’s economic downturn, not its deep recession and hyperinflation. This essay then delves into three sociopolitical causes of Venezuela’s poverty crisis: aggressive Chavismo statist policies that overextended the Venezuelan economy and made it vulnerable to international oil prices, a strong presence of illegal market sectors that disrupted market equilibrium, and Venezuela’s personal dictatorship under the Chávez-Maduro administration. Despite the preceding three sociopolitical factors contributing to Venezuela’s hyperinflation, the country’s economic outlook is positive owing to a vacancy in the global oil market as a result of the 2022 Ukrainian summer counteroffensive. This paper proposes that the key to successfully resolving the crisis is promoting private investment and tackling the resource curse, both of which require a robust democracy with an independent press and judiciary. Venezuela may seek international assistance to implement political reforms, abolish foreign exchange restrictions, and move toward economic liberalization.

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