<http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D8M9BED00.htm>
The Associated Press  December 27, 2006, 1:10PM EST  text size: TT
Venezuela oil bonanza feeds credit boom
By FABIOLA SANCHEZ

CARACAS, Venezuela

Venezuelans are increasingly pulling out their credit cards as an
economy flush with soaring oil profits experiences a consumption boom.

Credit spending -- through credit cards and auto loans -- more than
doubled in 2006 compared to the previous year, reaching some US$5.3
billion (euro4 billion) by the end of November, according to a study
by the Venezuelan banking research company Softline.

That figure doesn't include December credit spending, but it's already
101 percent higher than the full-year total for 2005, showing that
Venezuelans are choosing to spend rather than save, said Jose Grasso,
an economist and the director of Softline.

The South American country is the world's fifth largest oil exporter,
and growing spending by President Hugo Chavez's government amid high
oil world oil prices has helped infuse the economy with cash.

On Wednesday, National Assembly Finance Commission president Rodrigo
Cabezas said economic growth will top 10 percent this year.

"This is the highest rate in Latin America, and it reaffirms a
significant path of healthy economic growth," Cabezas told reporters.
"Next year we will grow for a fourth consecutive year."

But Grasso said the economy has some imbalances, noting that interest
rates offered by banks average less than 7 percent while inflation
stands at 14.9 percent, so saving money is often a losing proposition.

Instead, Venezuelan consumers are sinking their money into cars,
computers, appliances and home improvements, Grasso said.

The Central Bank last year set a minimum interest rate for savings at
6.5 percent and a maximum rate for credit at 28 percent.

Former Central Bank manager Jose Guerra, who is critical of Chavez's
government, noted that Venezuela's inflation rate is the highest in
South America.

Guerra said inflation has been boosted by the glut of cash and by
price increases for many imported goods because the bolivar currency
has lost value in bond trading against the U.S. dollar.

Venezuela has strict controls on currency trading, effective since
2003. While the official exchange rate stands at 2,150 bolivars per
dollar, the rate in black-market trading and in bond transactions is
at about 3,300 bolivars to the dollar, which has contributed to higher
prices for food imports and other basic goods.

--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

Reply via email to