Title: Venezuela: A textbook case of a resource-rich country?
1 "Venezuela A textbook case of a resource-rich
country?"
- Osmel Manzano (UCAB and IADB)
- Natural Resource Booms, Macroeconomic Management
and Civil Conflict in Latin America - Tenth Annual Global Development Conference
'Natural Resources and Development - Kuwait, 2009
2Stylized facts
- Venezuela is a classic example of a resource-rich
economy
3Oil is the main source of foreign currency
4mayor source of fiscal income
5 and an important part of the economy
6Stylized facts
- Venezuela is a classic example of a resource-rich
economy - Oil is the biggest exporter, fiscal contributor
and economic activity.
7Venezuela represents 7 of the Worlds oil
reserves
8Venezuela was, has been and is abundant in oil
9In fact, Venezuela is among the top 10 in
abundance
10Stylized facts
- Venezuela is a classic example of a resource-rich
economy - Oil is the biggest exporter, fiscal contributor
and economic activity. - In the world context, Venezuela is abundant in
oil - Has it behaved as one?
11Fiscal Performance
- Fiscal expenditure has followed oil exports
12Fiscal outcome followed oil exports
13Fiscal Performance
- Fiscal expenditure has followed oil exports
- As well as GDP
14Collapse of Oil Exports and GDP
15Fiscal Performance
- Fiscal expenditure has followed oil exports
- As well as GDP
- There is formal evidence
16Response to price shocks
- Fiscal
- Videgaray (1998)
- Panel of Countries
- Elasticity of fiscal exp. to oil exports
- Total Panel symmetric 0.183
- Total Panel asymmetric 0.200 (up) 0.123 (down)
- Venezuela symmetric 0.185
- Venezuela symmetric 0.273 (up) and 0.094 (down)
17Response to price shocks
- Fiscal
- Bozzari and Ricon (2002)
- Time series of Venezuela
- Same results
- Capital expenditures have higher elasticity
- Cycles
- Mendez (2007)
- VARs
- Oil shocks explain 32 of GDP fluctuations and
last 8 years
18Fiscal Performance
- Fiscal expenditure has followed oil exports
- As well as GDP
- There is formal evidence
- Venezuela has misbehaved as the typical
resource-rich economy IN THE FLOWS
19Flows vs. stock
- Venezuela has not leveraged its reserves
20Reserves and Debt
21Reserves and Debt
22Flows vs. stock
- Venezuela has not leveraged its reserves
- Different behavior than other countries
23Venezuela seems to behave different
24Venezuela seems to behave different
25All were experiencing higher reserves
?
26Flows vs. stock
- Venezuela has not leveraged its reserves
- Different behavior than other countries
- Venezuela has one of the lowest extraction rates
27Among the bottom 10 extractors
28Flows vs. stock
- Venezuela has not leveraged its reserves
- Different behavior than other countries
- Venezuela has one of the lowest extraction rates
- There is evidence of this behavior.
29Stock and fiscal performance
- Videgaray (1998) For a sample of oil countries,
Venezuelan flow elasticity is around 80 that of
the other countries. Stock elasticity 32 - Fernandez, Gomez and Manzano (2001) No impact of
an heritage fund on future generations fiscal
accounts
30Flows vs. stock
- Venezuela has not leveraged its reserves
- Different behavior than other countries
- Venezuela has one of the lowest extraction rates
- There is evidence of this behavior.
- Venezuela is saving under the ground (and
abroad ? )
31Saving under the ground
- Inefficient Bad balance sheet management
- Can we explain why?
- Preservation Principle (Juan Perez A.)
- Institutions?
-
32Institutions
- Hausmann (2003) Growth collapse due to poor
conflict management institutions. - Fernandez, Gomez and Manzano (2006) Future
generations might not benefit for an optimal
extraction path.
33Generational accounts
34Institutions
- Manzano and Monaldi (2009) Expropriation cycles
in the oil sector are due to poor tax rules and
lack of conflict resolution institutions. - Manzano (2009) Oil policy does not always follow
fundamentals
35Extraction path
36Extraction path
37Saving under the ground
- Inefficient Bad balance sheet management
- Can we explain why?
- Preservation Principle (Juan Perez A.)
- Institutions?
- Could it be that Venezuelans do not want to sell
the crowns jewels because of poor institutions? - What about the 1999 Constitution?
- What about allocation of new oil fields after
1999?
38Areas given to IOCs and NOCs
Time Time
Before 1998 After 1998
Type of field Old fields -Auction of 34 operational contracts
Type of field New - Auction of 4 Heavy oil JV -Auction of 8 JV for exploration (only 3 viable) 12 Heavy oil govt to govt JV Auction (2009) of 4 Heavy Oil JV
39Saving under the ground
- Inefficient Bad balance sheet management
- Can we explain why?
- Preservation Principle (Juan Perez A.)
- Institutions?
- Could it be that Venezuelans will not sell the
crowns jewels because poor institutions? - What about the 1999 Constitution?
- What about allocation of new oil fields after
1999? - What about surveys that find that Venezuelans
have higher preferences for the State than the
market? - Silent conflict?
- Urbaneja (1995)
- Karl (2008)
40Concluding remarks
- With regards to flows, Venezuela has misbehaved
as the typical resource-rich economy - Nevertheless, Venezuela is saving under the
ground. - Inefficient mechanism Bad balance sheet
management - We need a better understanding of the incentives
to do this.
41 "Venezuela A textbook case of a resource-rich
country?"
- Osmel Manzano (UCAB and IADB)
- Natural Resource Booms, Macroeconomic Management
and Civil Conflict in Latin America - Tenth Annual Global Development Conference
'Natural Resources and Development - Kuwait, 2009
42The difference holds even after 1987
?
43Current Account
?