Venezuela
is suffering from plummeting oil prices, runaway inflation and
shortages of basic foodstuffs, but it now has at least one lifeline: a $20 billion investment package from
China, announced by Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro this week. But
with Venezuela facing a recession, inflation over 60 percent and
widespread predictions of a default on its debt this year, some analysts
say it’s hard to pinpoint China’s incentive for handing over the funds.
Venezuela
has been particularly hard hit by declining oil prices, which fell by
50 percent in the second half of 2014 and have dipped below $50 a
barrel. The hit to Venezuela’s primary export has taken its toll on the
country’s foreign reserves, and Bloomberg estimates Venezuela’s risk of
default this year at 90 percent.
President Nicolas Maduro, who has vehemently denied that the country
would default on its debt, traveled to China this week to negotiate more
economic cooperation, a visit that many observers interpreted as a
last-ditch effort to secure emergency assistance from Beijing.
Following
a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping Wednesday, Maduro announced
that China, through the Chinese Development Bank and Bank of China,
agreed to invest $20 billion in energy, social and industrial projects
over the next decade, although he didn’t specify any of the projects
involved. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said in
a press conference that China would support “efforts by the Venezuelan
side to adjust its economic structure and build a production-oriented
economic model,” but he didn’t confirm the investment amount or offer
additional details on how the money might be used. It also remains
unclear whether any part of the recent agreement involves loans that
Venezuela could use to make additional debt payments.
China
has granted Venezuela more than $50 billion in loans since 2007, around
$20 billion of which is still outstanding, and Beijing remains Caracas’
largest creditor. About half of the nearly 600,000 barrels of oil
Venezuela ships to China every day goes toward servicing that debt.
Margaret
Myers, director of the China and Latin America program at the
Inter-American Dialogue, said she was surprised by the move, noting that
some of China’s oil companies and major banks have been increasingly
cautious about undertaking risks in recent months. “There are a lot of
voices in China that are opposed to continued engagement with
Venezuela,” including from within the government, she said. “They’re
very worried about what is happening with political risk in Venezuela,
what Maduro’s plans are, and social stability.”
The decision to invest in Venezuela “doesn’t jibe,” she added.
Miguel
Tinker-Salas, a professor of Latin America Studies at Pomona College,
noted that Maduro’s announcement came just as China declared a
commitment to invest $250 billion in Latin America ahead of its meeting
with the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, which is
currently underway. The investment deal, he said, was simply part of
China’s wider strategy to gain a stronger foothold in the region.
“It’s
part of a broader relationship in the context of a multipolar world
where Latin America can seek better terms of trade, as opposed to
dealing with one traditional ally, the U.S.,” he said.
Tinker-Salas
also dismissed the default fears circulating around Venezuela. “One
thing Maduro and [former Venezuelan President Hugo] Chavez have both
done is consistently paid off their international debt,” he said. “There
are economic difficulties and challenges, but when Chavez came to power
in 1999, oil was $7 a barrel. The larger issue is whether Venezuela can
limit its dependence on oil.” The extent to which the new investments
could assist with that goal is still unknown, he added.
Observers
have usually viewed China’s increasing investments in Latin America as a
way for Beijing to access more resource markets and build up
geopolitical influence in the region. But Patrick Chovanec, a China
analyst and chief strategist at Silvercrest Asset Management, said the
calculation was different with Venezuela. “The reality is that China
bought into Venezuela at a very high price, and now that price has
dropped significantly,” he said.
Chovanec
said he suspected the deal could represent a debt restructuring
agreement in disguise, given the Chinese Development Bank’s “massive
exposure” in making previous loans to Caracas. “It would be painful for
the Chinese Development Bank to say, ‘You’re right, we lost a lot of
money.’ It’s much easier, if you have an opaque banking system, to
extend and pretend and say, ‘Everything’s fine.’ And since nobody can
actually calculate the present value of the loans, who’s to say you got a
bad deal?”
“Even
if China thought it was getting some geopolitical benefit – and I think
it’s sort of hazy what sort of benefit it would get – $20 billion is a
pretty steep price to pay for a country that everyone thinks is going to
default,” he added.
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