Three in four Venezuelans live in extreme poverty
According to a study by a team of researchers in 2021 76.6% of Venezuelans live on less than $1.90 a day, the international standard for extreme poverty. The report, the Encuesta Nacional de Condiciones de Vida (ENCOVI), has been produced every year since 2014, when extreme poverty was “only” 13.1%. The ENCOVI study estimates that Venezuela’s Gross Domestic Product has shrunk by 74% since 2014, and hyperinflation has been so severe that on October 1, Venezuela announced that it was cutting six zeroes from its currency—the second such overhaul in three years.
In 2015, Maduro suspended official poverty statistics to conceal his government’s terrible mismanagement of the economy, but the flood of people fleeing his cruel fecklessness cannot be hidden. A wave of displacement that began in 2014, has grown to more than 5.4 million Venezuelans displaced according to United Nations estimates, the vast majority of whom are in the neighboring countries of Colombia, Peru and Ecuador. That’s more than 5% of Venezuela’s total population, the second worst refugee crisis in the world after Syria, and the largest mass migration event in the history of the Americas.
Maduro is quick to blame economic sanctions by the United States as the cause of all his woes, including his country’s economic collapse. But Venezuela’s ruin long predates the 2017 enactment of targeted U.S. sanctions, and economists agree that corruption, poor policy and dysfunction on the part of the Maduro regime are responsible. A three-fold increase in oil prices from 2003 to 2014 brought about vast improvements in per capita GDP and poverty rates, but masked underlying weakness and under investment; when oil prices collapsed in the summer of 2014 so too did Venezuelan oil production, and its economy.
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