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At a time when Venezuela’s record $25 billion in arrears to importers has its citizens waiting hours in line to buy drinking water and crossing borders in search of medicine, President Nicolas Maduro is using the nation’s dwindling supply of dollars to enrich bondholders.
Venezuela, which imports just about everything, and its state oil producer have paid $2.8 billion in interest to overseas creditors this year, according to Barclays Plc. Including debt principal, bondholder outlays will balloon to almost $10 billion by year-end, the London-based firm estimates.
By putting off the local companies responsible for supplying everything from diapers to cancer medications, Maduro can preserve access to debt markets and protect oil shipments that would be vulnerable to bondholder seizure, said Alejandro Arreaza, an analyst at Barclays. Even if that means fanning the world’s fastest inflation and inflaming protests over shortages that have left at least 42 people dead since February.
“The government’s priority is to pay the sovereign debt,” Alejandro Arreaza, an analyst at Barclays Plc, said in a telephone interview from New York.
originally posted by: Hx3_1963
WOW these thieving banksters are getting desperate, this should go over well
Food Lines in Venezuela
What will the American people do when those entitlements run out? When their dollars no longer hold any value and they need food for their families? Most Americans are not only oblivious to what’s coming, but they are completely dependent on their luxuries. How would the average American survive if their was a food shortage and you couldn’t simply walk up to your local grocery store and fill your carts with food.
Right now there are huge food lines in Venezuela and people are even having to mark themselves like cattle with markers to hold their spots in lines. Check out what Business Insider recently reported about the food crisis in Venezuela.
It’s hard to get a sense of what a food shortage is like unless you’ve lived through one, but this tidbit from Venezuela serves as a chilling illustration. The lines to get into government supermarkets are so long that people mark their arms with their place in line. It’s not a permanent tattoo — just a pen — but the point is to make sure that the long lines stay as orderly as possible.
The amount of debt globally has soared more than 40 percent to $100 trillion since the first signs of the financial crisis as governments borrowed to pull their economies out of recession and companies took advantage of record low interest rates.
originally posted by: metodex
a reply to: burdman30ott6
I may have understoof everything wrong, but arre you blaming it on bankers?
Correct me if I am wrong,cause i wanna be wrong
I absolutely am. In the 90s, Venezuela owed a ridiculous amount of foreign debt, mostly directly to the IMF. Chavez put the country through some serious austerity programs to pay that debt off
originally posted by: burdman30ott6
My argument would be that the government is merely a peon of the global banking system.
originally posted by: paraphi
originally posted by: burdman30ott6
My argument would be that the government is merely a peon of the global banking system.
Just too simple. You can have greed without bankers. Corruption exists where there is power without checks and accountability. Venezuela is just corrupt and paying the price of mismanagement.
Regards