Shortages in Venezuela

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So I just finish telling my class about Zimbabwe last week and now there's this: (Miami Herald)

CARACAS - Meat cuts vanished from Venezuelan supermarkets this week, leaving only unsavory bits like chicken feet, while costly artificial sweeteners have increasingly replaced sugar, and many staples sell far above government-fixed prices.
President Hugo Chávez's administration blames the food supply problems on speculators, but industry officials say government price controls that strangle profits are responsible.
Such shortages have sporadically appeared with items from milk to coffee since early 2003, when Chávez began regulating prices for 400 basic products as a way to counter inflation and protect the poor.
Yet inflation has soared to an accumulated 78 percent in the last four years in an economy awash in petrodollars, and food prices have increased particularly swiftly, creating a widening discrepancy between official prices and the true cost of getting goods to market in Venezuela.
''Shortages have increased significantly as well as violations of price controls,'' Central Bank director Domingo Maza Zavala told Unión Radio on Thursday. ``The difference between real market prices and controlled prices is very high.''

So here we have price controls leading to shortages and black markets. Who does the government blame? Speculators--that is, people who manage to get the goods cheaply and hold out for higher prices. Talk about predictable.

Hat tip to Phil Miller, who says,

It's an excellent example of someone trying to fight the invisible hand and the invisible hand fighting back.

Indeed.

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This page contains a single entry by William Polley published on February 12, 2007 1:47 PM.

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