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Vendors show woes of Chavez revolution
AP on Yahoo ^ | 5/17/07 | Natalie Obiko Pearson - ap

Posted on 05/17/2007 12:50:22 PM PDT by NormsRevenge

CARACAS, Venezuela - Street vendors seem to encroach on every broken sidewalk, every open plaza, every grimy corner of downtown Caracas, most of them grinding out a living on the pavement for lack of a better option.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has cast himself as a defender of this poor underclass, upholding their right to work on the street while promising his leftist revolution will bring more dignified employment.

Eight years into his rule, their existence has become an uncomfortable reminder that Chavez's policies — like those of his predecessors — have failed to create enough stable, productive jobs despite a growing economy boosted by windfall oil revenues.

Street peddlers, pirate taxis, maids, and others toiling in Venezuela's informal economy account for 45 percent of the labor force — at last count, 5.5 million people, according to the government's March employment statistics. The street sellers are the most visible face of this formidable off-the-books economy, a phenomenon common across Latin America.

Many street vendors remain loyal to Chavez, saying he has brought benefits — if not jobs — to their downtrodden neighborhoods: subsidized food, basic health care, education.

"Before the president arrived, the police would beat us," said Ervert Anillo, a 35-year-old fruit seller. "He is the only one who has taken notice of us. ... At least now we can work in peace."

The street sellers peddle staples like sugar and flour below government-set prices — sometimes still in packaging from subsidized state-run markets.

While Chavez's increasingly heavy hand on the economy has frustrated formal businesses with restrictions such as price and currency controls, the street-level economy is ruled by supply and demand. Vendors haven't benefitted from Chavez's 20 percent minimum wage hike, and take home only as much as they hawk.

Ana Rosa Gutierrez, 79, spends two hours each night sewing under an exposed light bulb in her red brick-and-tin home in a shantytown east of Caracas. Six days a week, she rides a rickety minibus into the city to sell her clothes.

"I raised four children like this," she said, pointing at T-shirts and blouses hanging from her makeshift stall.

On a good day, she might make the equivalent of $10.

"It's capitalism in its most savage form," said Isabel Pereira, a Caracas economist.

Chavez insists his socialist policies are curing the country's capitalist ills, including endemic unemployment. Government statistics indicate some headway: Last year the number of formal-sector jobs increased by 570,000 — about 10 percent. Poverty also is declining, according to government statistics.

Yet overall unemployment has barely budged: It averaged 10 percent last year, compared to 11 percent when Chavez was first elected in 1999.

Critics note that the state payroll has grown dramatically and the government has changed the way it measures the jobless rate by excluding participants in state social programs, who receive modest stipends.

And this during one of Venezuela's greatest oil bonanzas ever — a boom that has helped the economy grow by 10.3 percent last year, the fastest in the region.

Venezuelans overwhelmingly re-elected Chavez in December, and since then authorities have bulldozed street stalls in parts of Caracas, moving vendors to state marketplaces and coaxing others away from the informal economy with job training and cash handouts up to $250.

The government insists it is using petrodollars to diversify the economy, funding cooperatives in fledgling industries from cement production to cacao farming.

But critics say Chavez's economic policies are hindering job creation and entrenching the informal economy, scaring businesses with threats of expropriation while new regulations make it harder to turn a profit.

"He's accentuated all the perversions of the Venezuelan economy," Pereira says. "The street vendors are out there simply for lack of work in the formal sector."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: chavez; hugochavez; revolution; vendors; venezuela; woes

Street vendors push their food cart up a hill in Caracas, Friday, March 2, 2007. Street vendors seem to encroach on every broken sidewalk, every open plaza, every grimy corner of downtown Caracas, most of them grinding out a living on the pavement for lack of a better option. (AP Photo/Leslie Mazoch)


1 posted on 05/17/2007 12:50:24 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
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To: NormsRevenge
The street sellers peddle staples like sugar and flour below government-set prices — sometimes still in packaging from subsidized state-run markets.

The don't see the irony. They voted in a socialist but make their living by being very good capitalists...

2 posted on 05/17/2007 12:55:17 PM PDT by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - they want to die for islam and we want to kill them)
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To: NormsRevenge

The Venezuelan people voted for this assclown. Not let them live with the consequences.


3 posted on 05/17/2007 1:15:58 PM PDT by DesScorp
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To: NormsRevenge

Were those votes legit? Not by Jimmuh’s standards, I mean?

Well, regardless, Chavez is in charge, now he can run his country into the ground just like his idol and mentor Fidel did decades ago.


4 posted on 05/17/2007 1:28:21 PM PDT by Baladas
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To: Baladas

When legitimate businesses are finally ground into the ground, the street vendors will becoem the next targets, Chavez’s type simply cannot stand anyone making any money outside of their system, they are starting with the big fish, but eventually the small fries will be caught up in the net.

It never changes.


5 posted on 05/17/2007 1:36:21 PM PDT by padre35 (we are surrounded that simplifies things-Chesty Puller)
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