Venezuela’s Maduro Admits Economic ‘Catastrophe’

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro admitted before a hostile legislature on Friday that the oil-rich nation is mired in a “catastrophic” economic crisis, hours after decreeing a two-month state of emergency.
Venezuela’s Maduro Admits Economic ‘Catastrophe’
A policeman walks past a graffiti reading "The fight is of poor and rich classes" outside the National Assembly ahead of Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro's presentation of the annual report before the opposition controlled parliament in Caracas on Jan. 15, 2016. Ronaldo Schemidt/AFP/Getty Images
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Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro admitted before a hostile legislature on Friday that the oil-rich nation is mired in a “catastrophic” economic crisis, hours after decreeing a two-month state of emergency.

Maduro’s first state of the nation address before the newly opposition-held National Assembly, which is locked in a bitter power struggle with his administration, came as Venezuela’s central bank released its first economic growth and inflation statistics in more than a year.

The figures show the magnitude of the country’s recession: the economy shrank 4.5 percent in the first nine months of 2015, the central bank said, while inflation for the same period came in at a painful 108.7 percent, fuelled by crippling shortages.

“These catastrophic figures [are] the result of an economic situation that in another era of regressive neoliberal and capitalist policies would surely have pushed [the Venezuelan] people into unemployment,” said Maduro.

Earlier, the leftist leader sought to seize the initiative in his standoff with the legislature, decreeing a 60-day state of “economic emergency”.

It gave the administration special temporary powers to boost production and ensure access to key goods, including taking over private companies’ resources, imposing currency controls, and “other social, economic or political measures deemed fitting”.

Addressing the legislature, Maduro said the plunge in oil prices over the past year and a half had the country trapped in an “economic storm” that pitted two models against each other.

“The socialist model is the only one, not the neoliberal model that wants to come and privatise everything,” he said to jeers from opposition lawmakers.

“You will have to come and overthrow me if you want to pass a privatisation law. No, no, and no!”