While Europe’s fiscal woes seem to be on everyone’s financial radar recently, and
rightfully so, there is instability everywhere.
This is a global economic crisis and it’s affecting hundreds of millions of people all over the world.
Earlier this week Argentine President Cristina Kirchner responded to
her country’s sky-rocketing inflation rates by freezing prices on food, a
move
Forbes magazine says will soon lead to widespread corruption in the business community and government.
In Venezuela, where President Hugo Chavez has
attempted to control all
aspects of his country’s economy, price freezes instituted on essential
goods like diapers and cleaning products over a year ago failed to curb
soaring inflation which registered at over 22% last year. In response,
with their quiver out of arrows, the Venezuelan government announced
today that they are devaluing their national currency, the Bolivar, by
over a third. The announcement had the immediate impact of increasing
the price for a US dollar in Bolivar by nearly 50%.
By boosting the bolivar value of Venezuela’s
dollar-denominated oil sales, the change is expected to help ease a
difficult budget outlook for the government, which has turned increasingly to borrowing to meet its spending obligations.
But analysts said the move would not be sufficient to end the
government’s budget woes or balance the exchange rate with an overvalued
currency. Economists predicted higher inflation and a likely
continuation of shortages of some staple foods, such as cornmeal,
chicken and sugar.
…
Venezuela’s government has had strict currency exchange controls
since 2003 and maintains a fixed, government-set exchange rate. Under
the controls, people and businesses must apply to a government currency
agency to receive dollars at the official rate to import goods, pay for
travel or cover other obligations.
While those controls have restricted the amounts of dollars available
at the official rate, an illegal black market has flourished and the
value of the bolivar has recently been eroding. In black market street
trading, dollars have recently been selling for more than four times the
official exchange rate of 4.30 bolivars to the dollar.
…
Officials said the fixed exchange rate is changing from 4.30 bolivars to the dollar to 6.30 bolivars to the dollar.
Source: USA Today
The free market cannot be controlled in the way politicians and
central bankers would like you to believe. Any action to restrict access
will lead to an opposite reaction that often involves black markets and
panic buying.
Case in point: Americans
bought a gun every 1.5 seconds in the last year. Why do you think that is?
Chavez, like the brilliant politicians, economists and financial
wizards at the helm of U.S. recovery efforts, has tried to control his
economy through central governance for ten years. It has failed on all
counts. Inflation has continued unabated. Price controls have led to
black markets in everything from goods to currencies. Despite promises
to the contrary, people continue to suffer without respite.
But the implications for Venezuela’s latest move could be even more serious than just internal Venezuelan shortages.
Perhaps the
Black Swan event that no one saw coming just happened.
One of our insightful readers,
Just One Guy, explains:
This is a REALLY big devaluation.
The implications here are really not GOOD.
Venezuela is a smidgen on the map, but as a major OPEC nation, it
will have – in short order – BIG implications in the global oil price,
say 60 days… no more until the effect hits. In the meanwhile
the Venezuelan government will enforce price controls internally while
trying to skim the differential off it’s oil sales into the
government’s coffers.
The net effect of this will be a stall in the consumer goods imports since the peoples wages will NOT increase…
A very short clock is now ticking since this will ripple through ALL of South America in VERY short order…
This may well be the lighting of the proverbial fuse… everywhere.
Further ‘Nationalizations’ will begin happening and will spread
rapidly throughout the continent… as that happens Europe’s life-blood
will trickle to a halt.
Our investors will be affected too, but Europe’s sole profitable business’s are overseas…many in South America.
So it begins…
Argentina and Venezuela, two of the region’s largest commodity
exporters, just went critical. It will spread. As we noted previously,
nationalization efforts were already under way before this week’s developments.
And, in Chile, businesses are already feeling the impact of Argentina’s price freeze:
The Chilean companies Falabella, Sodimac, and Cencosud
complying with the freeze do millions of dollars of business in the
country.
Some critics of Kirchner’s economic policy say the freeze could lead
to food shortages in Argentina and even black market sales of products.
“Price freezes mean no profits for sellers or even losses. Who will
import food under these conditions?” said Paul Gregory, an economics
professor at the University of Houston.
The freeze is bad for Argentina and bad for Chile, he added.
Source: Santiago Times
Similar side effects will be felt by anyone who does business in Venezuela.
The interdependence of global monetary, financial and economic systems cannot be underestimated in this context.
With Europe in shambles, Chinese growth collapsing, South America in
panic, and the US now in recession, the potential for a catalyst that
will set off another financial meltdown and full-blown economic collapse
has increased exponentially.
There are a lot of things that can go wrong here.
One thing you can be sure of is, just as the people of Venezuela had
no forewarning about the devaluation of their currency, we won’t be told
until it’s already too late.
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