The Media Myth of āOnce Prosperousā and Democratic Venezuela Before ChĆ”vez

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From Venezuela and made by Venezuelan Chavistas
By Joe Emersberger & Justin Podur – Sep 28, 2021
Joe Emersberger and Justin Podur look at some of the mainstream mistruths about Venezuela.
The following piece is adapted from the authorsā new book,Ā Extraordinary Threat: The US Empire, the Media and 20 Years of Coup Attempts in Venezuela, published byĀ Monthly Review Press.
In his State of the UnionĀ addressĀ on February 6, 2019, Donald Trump said:
We stand with the Venezuelan people in their noble quest for freedomāand we condemn the brutality of the Maduro regime, whose socialist policies have turned that nation from being the wealthiest in South America into a state of abject poverty and despair.
Trumpās ridiculous comment was not considered controversial, because the Western media, including the anti-Trump outlets like theĀ New York Times, have spent many years conveying a lie: that Venezuela had been very prosperous and democratic until Hugo ChĆ”vez, and then his successor NicolĆ”s Maduro, came along and ruined everything. If readers believe that, then they may indeed wonder, āWhy shouldnāt the US government help Venezuelans return to that prosperous state?ā
But this attitude is the result of common deceptions about Venezuelaās economic history, and it ignores how the rise of ChĆ”vez actually brought democratic reform, not regression, to Venezuela. The story the Western media tell should instead make people wonder how Chavismo could have become the dominant political force if everything had once been wonderful in Venezuela.
āOnce the richestā
This vague claim about Venezuelaās economic history, in various formsāāonce prosperous,ā āonce the richestāāhas become ubiquitous in the Western media. A Nexis search of English-language newspapers for āVenezuelaā and āonce prosperousā turned up 563 hits between 2015 and 2019.
The āonce prosperousā claim cannot refer to Venezuelaās natural wealth: The huge oil and gold reserves are still there. The clear intent of describing Venezuela as āonce prosperousā is to suggest that living conditions were āonceā those of a rich country.
So by what measure was Venezuela āonceā wealthy? When exactly was that? What is the ranking criteria being used to say it was one of the wealthiest? Was it once in the top 10% (by whatever measure)? The top 50%?
Itās always implied that Venezuelaās economic glory days were in the pre-ChĆ”vez era, but the financial journalist Jason Mitchell has made this claim explicitly. Writing for the UKĀ SpectatorĀ (2/18/17), he said, āTwenty years ago Venezuela was one of the richest countries in the world.ā So Venezuela had supposedly enjoyed its wealthy status in 1997, the year before Hugo ChĆ”vez was first elected. Thatās utter nonsense.
In reality, when ChĆ”vez was first elected in 1998, Venezuela had a 50%Ā poverty rate, despite having been a major oil exporter for several decades. ItĀ started exportingĀ oil in the 1920s, and it was only in the early 1970s that the biggest Middle Eastern oil producers, Saudi Arabia and Iran,Ā surpassedĀ Venezuela in production. In 1992, theĀ New York TimesĀ (2/5/92) reported that āonly 57% of Venezuelans are able to afford more than one meal a day.ā Does that sound like āone of the richest countries in the worldā? Obviously not, but it is worth saying more about the statistics that can be used to mislead people about Venezuelaās economic history.
Income and distribution
Economists typically useĀ GDP per capitaĀ to assess how rich a country is. It is basically a measure of the average income per person. If journalists cared to be at all precise when they say that Venezuela had once been ārich,ā then thatās a statistic theyād cite.
The chart below shows World Bank data for Venezuelaās real (inflation-adjusted) GDP per capita since 1960, and it contradicts Western mediaās relentlessly insinuated story that a transition from prosperity to poverty took place because of Chavismo. Real GDP per capita peaked inĀ 1977, near the end of an oil boom, then went into a long-term decline. When ChĆ”vez took office in 1999, it was at one of its lowest points in decades. Then it was driven even lower by the first two attempts to oust ChĆ”vez: the April 2002 coup and, several months later, a shutdown of the state oil companyāthe āoil strike.ā By 2013, real GDP per capita recovered dramatically, nearly reaching its 1977 peak.
Under ChĆ”vez, the poverty rate was cut in half, so there certainly is a correlation between GDP per capita and living conditions in Venezuela. But a countryās GDP per capita, by itself, says nothing about how income is distributed. And that can also make international comparisons very misleading.
For example, 1980 was very close to Venezuelaās historic peak in real GDP per capita, whichĀ ranked 32ndĀ in the world that year when adjusted for purchasing power parity, as economists recommend for international comparisons. But its infant mortality rate ranked 58th in the world, far below Cuba, whose infant mortality rate was 28th that year. Infant mortality is a basic health indicator that helps reveal the extent to which a countryās wealth is actually being used to benefit its people. In fact, Venezuelaās infant mortality rate in 1980 wasĀ more than twiceĀ as high as that in Cuba.
Another revealing year is 1989, when the massacre of poor demonstrators later known as the Caracazo took place. In terms of GDP per capita (adjusted for purchasing power parity), VenezuelaĀ ranked highestĀ in Central and South Americaāwhile its government perpetrated the most infamous slaughter of poor people in its modern history.
The massacre exposed the essentially fraudulent nature of Venezuelaās prosperity and democracy. It explains the rise of ChĆ”vez, and also reveals how the US government and media reflexively helped the Venezuelan government that perpetrated the massacre.
From Caracazo to Chavismo
It began on February 27, 1989. Venezuelan security forcesĀ killed hundreds, and possibly thousands, of poor people over a five-day period. The poor had risen up in revolt against an IMF-imposed āstructural adjustmentā program that involved stiff hikes to fuel prices and bus fares. The program was imposed by President Carlos Andres PĆ©rez, a man who had campaignedĀ sayingĀ that IMF programs were like a āneutron bomb that killed people but left buildings standing.ā
US President George H. W. Bush calledĀ PĆ©rez on March 3, 1989, while the Caracazo massacre was still taking place, to commiserate with PĆ©rez and offer Venezuela loans. The US mediaās Venezuela narrative suited Bushās foreign policy. AĀ New York TimesĀ article (11/11/90) about Venezuela by Clifford Krauss described PĆ©rez as āa charismatic social democrat.ā Not a word was written about the Caracazo massacre. The article focused on Bushās gratitude toward PĆ©rez for, among other things, boosting Venezuelaās oil output to help protect the United States from negative economic consequences after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.
On February 5, 1992, Lieutenant Colonel Hugo ChĆ”vez first became widely known to Venezuelans by attempting a military coup. The day ChĆ”vezās coup failed, a news article in theĀ New York TimesĀ (2/5/92) referred to Venezuela as āone of Latin Americaās relatively stable democratic governments,ā and to PĆ©rez himself as āa leading democrat,ā despite the Caracazo massacre only three years earlier, which is never mentioned. TheĀ TimesĀ also quoted thenāPresident Bush calling PĆ©rez āone of the great democratic leaders of our hemisphere.ā
Not another PƩrez
When ChĆ”vez first took office after elections in 1999, the US government did not go immediately on the attack. When you consider the flashy anti-IMF campaign rhetoric of Carlos Andres PĆ©rezāthe president who then massacred people to implement an IMF austerity planāitās unsurprising that the US would feel ChĆ”vez out for a while. Maybe ChĆ”vez would be similarly phonyāand therefore worthy of US support.
By 2001, the US government realized that ChĆ”vez was not going to be like PĆ©rez, who made a sick joke of his anti-IMF rhetoric once he was in office. ChĆ”vez was actually going to try to follow through on his promises to change the system and assert his countryās sovereignty. ChĆ”vez aggressively opposed the US invasion of Afghanistan, and even said that the US ambassador came calling and disrespectfully asked him to reverse his position. That provoked ChĆ”vez to order the ambassador out of the room. This was a key event in the souring of Venezuela/US relations (Bart Jones,Ā Hugo!,Ā Steerforth Press, 2007, p. 297).
Domestically, ChĆ”vez also had a short honeymoon period with Venezuelaās old elite and middle class. As Gregory Wilpert put it inĀ Changing Venezuela by Taking PowerĀ (Verso, 2006, p. 20):
When ChĆ”vez first took office, he enjoyed approval ratings of 90%, which would suggest that racism and classism for eventual middle-class opposition to ChĆ”vez could not be an important factor. Venezuelaās middle class had been sliding into poverty for two decades and supported ChĆ”vez in 1998 because they were desperate for change.
But soon enough, the old political elite, like the US ambassador, deeply resented ChĆ”vez asserting his authority. They had expected ChĆ”vezās deference. His African and Indigenous roots, and his working-class origin, could be overlooked, until he shunned the usual power brokers when making his cabinet appointments.
The conflict intensified when a constituent assembly, elected by voters, drafted a new constitution which was then approved in a referendum. Transitional authorities were appointed under the new democratic order. As Wilpert described it (Changing Venezuela, p. 20):
The old elite then used its control of the countryās mass media to turn the middle class against ChĆ”vez, creating a campaign that took advantage of the latent racism and classism in Venezuelan culture.
By 2004, predictably, ChĆ”vez relied much more heavily on the support of poor people to win elections (Changing Venezuela, p. 268ā269).
New constitution, new era
In the first year he took office, ChƔvez initiated a three-step process to give Venezuela a new constitution. In April 1999, he went to voters asking if they wanted to initiate the process by electing a constitutional assembly, and if they approved of the rules specifying how the assembly would be elected. His side won that referendum with 92% of the vote on the first question, and with 86% on the second (which specified basic electoral rules) (Changing Venezuela, p. 21).
Elections were held in July to choose the members of the assembly. ChĆ”vez supporters won 125 of the assemblyās 131 seats. The assembly then drafted a constitution and, four months later, it was approved by 72% of voters in another referendum.
The assembly also appointed a transitional body, known as a Congressillo (small congress), that appointed a new attorney general, human rights defender, comptroller general, national electoral council and supreme court.
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In July 2000, ChĆ”vez went to voters again for a fresh presidential mandate under the new constitution and prevailed easily with 59.8% of the vote. But these were āmega-elections,ā as Wilpert (Changing Venezuela, p. 22) put it, ones that āeliminated the countryās old political elite almost entirely from the upper reaches of Venezuelaās public institutionsā:
Thirty-three thousand candidates ran for over 6,000 offices that day. In the end, ChĆ”vez was reconfirmed in office with 59.8% of the vote. ChĆ”vezās supporters won 104 out of 165 National Assembly seats and 17 out of 23 state governorships. On the local level, ChĆ”vez candidates were less successful, winning only about half of the municipal mayorsā posts.
Ominously, aĀ New York TimesĀ editorialĀ in August 1999 already presumed to lecture Venezuelans and distort a very democratic reform process as a power grab:
They should be very wary of the methods Mr. ChƔvez is using. He is drawing power into his own hands, and misusing a special constitutional assembly meeting now in Caracas that is composed almost entirely of his supporters. Mr. ChƔvez, a former paratroop commander who staged an unsuccessful military coup in 1992, has so far shown little respect for the compromises necessary in a democracy, which Venezuela has had for 40 years.
Clearly, any genuine reform process in Latin America was going to be vilified by liberal outlets like theĀ New York Times.
Key lies
The lies peddled about Venezuelaās past make US aggression against it possible in the present. It is worth summing up some of these key lies:
⢠Venezuela was āonce prosperousā and ruined by socialism. In fact, Venezuela was an unequal country in which most people were poor despite the countryās oil wealth, which had generated huge export revenues since the 1920s.
⢠Venezuela was a democracy before Chavismo.Ā In fact, Venezuelaās democracy was a gravely flawed system in which politicians alternated holding power according to an undemocratic agreement, and rammed austerity down the throats of Venezuelaās poor by committing massacres, such as the Caracazo.
⢠Chavismo ruined Venezuelaās democracy.Ā ChĆ”vez indeed attempted to carry out a coup in 1992, but he came to power through an election in 1998, and afterward made changes through extensive democratic processes.
Featured image: Hugo ChƔvez swept to power in 1998. (Reference)
Joe Emersberger is an engineer, writer, and activist based in Canada. His writing, focused on the Western mediaās coverage of the Americas, can be found on FAIR.org, CounterPunch.org, TheCanary.co, Telesur English, and ZComm.org.
Justin Podur is a Toronto-based writer and a writing fellow at Globetrotter, a project of the Independent Media Institute. You can find him on his website at podur.org and on Twitter @justinpodur. He teaches at York University in the Faculty of Environmental Studies.