RBS Lowers Venezuela GDP Forecast on Devaluation, Electricity
By Daniel Cancel
March 26 (Bloomberg) -- Royal Bank of Scotland Plc lowered its forecast for Venezuelan economic growth this year as an electricity shortage causes a drop in output and restricted dollar sales curb imports, RBS analyst Boris Segura said.
RBS now expects Venezuela’s economy to shrink 3 percent in 2010 rather than post zero growth. Consumer prices may rise less than the bank expected at an annual rate of 30 percent, down from a previous forecast of 40 percent, Segura said.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez devalued the bolivar by as much as 50 percent on Jan. 8 in a bid to narrow the country’s budget deficit which is projected to be 3.2 percent of GDP, according to Morgan Stanley. Venezuela’s foreign exchange administration commission, known as Cadivi, has failed to allot sufficient dollars to importers to boost production and pull the South American country out of a recession, Segura said.
“After the devaluation I was expecting zero growth if Cadivi stepped up to the plate, which of course they haven’t done,” Segura said yesterday in a telephone interview from Stamford, Connecticut. “The second whitecap is the electricity crisis, which is taking a toll on manufacturing and retail activity.”
As part of currency controls implemented by Chavez in 2003, companies must seek approval from the government to buy dollars at the official rates, now 2.6 and 4.3 per dollar depending on the use of the money. When they don’t get approval, companies turn to the unregulated currency market where the bolivar traded at 7.05 per dollar today unchanged from yesterday, the highest since Aug. 4.
Export Plunge
Venezuela’s economy contracted 3.3 percent last year and fell into recession for the first time since 2003 as oil output and exports plunged. The economy may contract 7 percent in the first quarter of this year, Segura said.
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