There has been a lot of noise lately about Venezuela's mounting
public debt level, which has more than tripled since 1998 (from US$28.4bn) to
reach somewhere between US$115bn and US$125bn at the end of 2010, depending on
the estimate, taking it to nigh on 50% of 2010 GDP, which is almost double the
Latin American average. In the bigger scheme of things, Venezuela's debt
position, and its ability to pay, still compares very favourably with the likes
of the new European Union 'basket cases', like the effectively bankrupt Greece
and Ireland, where the debt/GDP ratios are a staggering 168% and 111%
respectively, and even the US, where the ratio is now about 95%. More notable
perhaps is that China is now by far Venezuela's largest creditor; if a pending
new US$10bn housing loan is secured, Venezuela will be in hoc to the Asian giant
to the tune of US$42bn. Whether that's payable in cash or in future oil
shipments is neither here nor there, given the Venezuelan treasury's utter
dependence on the lifeblood oil export sector. End of preview - This article contains approximately 1663 words.
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