Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn. Benjamin Franklin

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Good Money After Bad

By Fernando Menéndez, principal of Cordoba Group Int'l LLC

China - US Focus - October 9, 2013 

Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro recently returned from Beijing with a $5 billion line of credit from the China Development Bank (CDB).  This comes at a very difficult time for Maduro, whose regime’s support is at an all time low since his predecessor, Hugo Chávez, first came to power 15 years ago.  For Maduro things abroad look better than things at home.
A former bus driver, named as successor to the late, charismatic Chávez, Maduro is driving his country’s economy into a ditch.  Instead of correcting his path, he has been shifting blame for his mismanagement on to others.

The Broken Record
Despite one of the largest oil booms in history, yielding over $90 billion a year to the Venezuelan government, Maduro runs one of the worst performing economies in the Americas.
Since coming to power in April, after a hotly contested election in which he claimed to receive just over fifty percent of the vote, Maduro has presided over recurrent national electricity blackouts, one of the highest murder rates in the world, shortages of basic goods such as rice, oil, butter, flour, and even toilet paper.

To read more...

No comments:

Post a Comment