Since Bernie wouldn't answer the question, do any of our TSB socialists care to answer the question of why socialism has failed in Venezuela?Where did Venezuela go wrong in implementing socialism? How would we implement socialism in the US and avoid these problems?[Edited on September 3, 2016 at 11:15 PM. Reason : thought it was a good topic for Labor Day weekend ]
9/3/2016 11:12:25 PM
9/4/2016 12:08:37 AM
9/4/2016 12:48:29 AM
As much as I hate to agree with Earl, this one is clearly "cherry picking propaganda," which the left and right are both guilty of, though it's pretty wild he posted all those words without any of them being "currency/price controls," which most economists blame for the shortages Venezuela is dealing with (aka "not Socialism") [Edited on September 4, 2016 at 2:27 AM. Reason : I don't think NRR is actually blaming socialism due to his use of the z]
9/4/2016 2:21:54 AM
9/4/2016 6:37:45 AM
I just pulled into Darlington for the race. Hope to have some interesting reading here when I return.
9/4/2016 8:58:18 AM
9/5/2016 3:29:35 PM
Cool corelation.[Edited on September 5, 2016 at 4:28 PM. Reason : Right after discussing oil]
9/5/2016 4:27:04 PM
Back in 2002, when oil was about what it is today, Venezuela had a heavily diversified economy exporting cars, food, and manufactured goods (see chart). Now that oil has collapsed, these industries are no where to be seen. What changed between 2003 and today? Well, 13 years of socialism occurred in there somewhere.This collapse of non-oil exports is a sign of the collapse of the non-oil sector starting way back in 2005. Another way to view it, also from wikipedia:
9/5/2016 8:51:54 PM
9/5/2016 9:16:58 PM
^^ Cool corelation.[Edited on September 5, 2016 at 9:18 PM. Reason : ^^]
9/5/2016 9:17:19 PM
9/5/2016 9:43:57 PM
9/5/2016 10:10:18 PM
9/6/2016 10:00:55 AM
9/6/2016 11:01:15 AM
that non-oil exports fell because of the Bolivarian Revolution? Yes. Yes I do. It is usually what the business owners themselves said killed their businesses. So until we both have a different plausible cause and a reason why they would all lie about it, I'm gonna believe it.So, I gotta know, do you not believe it? You keep saying cool correlation, as if somehow a different explanation was plausible? If the US Navy was blockading Venezuela, I'm sure I would have heard about it, so it isn't that. If God put up a wall around the country, again, I'm sure I would have heard about it. What I have heard about at length is the continuous assault upon businesses launched by the regime itself. A sizable percentage of the business class of Venezuela is in prison right now...and you don't think that could have had anything to do with a fall in production? [Edited on September 6, 2016 at 2:39 PM. Reason : .,.]
9/6/2016 2:29:06 PM
9/6/2016 2:39:40 PM
Yeah, I mean there was considerable flight of businesses from Venezuela once the revolution happened and shit started to get confiscated, err, nationalized. Don't really know how that's even arguable.It may not be the entire reason that exports fell off, certainly embargoes and sanctions had an impact as well but I don't know how you don't lay a significant portion of the blame for Venezuela's collapse directly on the centralized economy run by Chavez and Maduro.There are certainly examples of good socialism (scandinavian countries) and bad socialism/communism (cuba, venezuela, most of eastern europe). The difference seems to be how centralized/planned the economy is.
9/6/2016 2:43:01 PM
My claim was that socialism caused them to have only one export. This was an over-simplification, they still have other exports, only 95% is oil, so yes, my claim should have been less simplified. Of course, state ownership of the means of production wasn't their only problem. It isn't only that nationalized businesses usually ceased production sometime after nationalization. No, most of the devastation was businesses that were killed by the government but not actually nationalized. So, pure political wrecking of the economy, not actually socialism. Very few of the 8,000 businesses that ceased to exist under the Bolivarian Revolution were actually nationalized, most were just killed off through regulation. So, are price controls, currency controls, organized looting, and regulation to destruction elements of textbook socialism? I guess not. So, you have convinced me, allow to rephrase: "The Bolivarian Revolution has caused them to have overwhelmingly less non-oil exports than they otherwise would have had." Regular oil exporting states, such as Texas, Norway, or Mexico etc are not facing economic collapse, currency collapse, and hunger due to lower oil prices. They are facing a recession, currency devaluation, and higher unemployment.
9/6/2016 3:01:09 PM
thats not how causation works my friend.
9/6/2016 3:48:34 PM
You said it was caused by your chosen three causes above...to hear you now belittling the concept of causation is funny. Semantics are fun. synapse and you have no defense of your preferred causes, but wanna play semantics with what I say caused the situation. Oh well, when the facts and law are against you, pound the table. [Edited on September 6, 2016 at 4:17 PM. Reason : .,.]
9/6/2016 4:15:47 PM
what definition of socialism are we even using in this thread? govt ownership of the means of production or lots-o-welfare?https://fee.org/articles/the-myth-of-scandinavian-socialism/[Edited on September 6, 2016 at 5:52 PM. Reason : adfs]
9/6/2016 5:46:44 PM
Both because OP didn't seem to know there was a difference.
9/6/2016 7:08:47 PM
not sure how you inferred that
9/6/2016 7:44:49 PM
Pj O'rourke wrote well about this very issue in Eat the Rich.
9/6/2016 8:11:50 PM
Coworkers family works in the Venezuelan oil industry. Since it was nationalized, the company is run very poorly. No one running the place cares at all about efficiently doing their jobs. There's also all sorts of socialist obligations that disrupt the work day and kill productivity
9/7/2016 11:51:55 AM
9/7/2016 11:58:13 AM
I just want to revisit something here. The E Man listed three reasons why the Venezuelan economy failed:1) Their economy is ~50% oil2) Extreme drought due to climate change3) External InfluenceI'm thinking that can't quite explain it, because the world has a country with three very similar characteristics, called Saudi Arabia. The Saudi population is comparable to that of Venezuela, and they're starting out with a lower baseline of pre-oil poverty and lack of development. And as to Earl's three reasons:1) 55% of Saudi GDP comes from petroleum2) It's a fucking desert3) The entire world concerns itself with what happens in Saudi ArabiaAnd the Saudi economy has not imploded. So it's not that.But the other side doesn't quite have it right, either. Nationalizing industry doesn't seem like a wholly sufficient explanation, not when we can once again look to the Saudis, who have owned Aramco since 1980 without collapsing. (If you want some variety, we could also look at Norway, which owns a controlling interest in Statoil and likes to dabble in socialism)Though I generally feel that nationalized industries will be less efficient than private ones, it does not follow that nationalization will lead to disaster. As with many things in life and geopolitics, the answer is more nuanced. When done in a country saturated with corruption, without access to necessary technical skills, and for half-cocked populist/nationalist reasons, that disaster looks a lot more likely. We can, with benefit of this contextual view, look at Venezuela and any number of developing economies. On the other hand, when you have a longstanding relationship with the industry, access to skilled laborers, and cut the hands off of people who steal shit, you can take over a company without immediate economic collapse. (Admittedly, in the case of the Saudis, it also helps if a third of your population are basically indentured servants)So basically my answer to the OP question, Venezuela's socialist experiment failed because:It was implemented and directed by an idiot blowhard and his crew of idiot blowhards, in a country that did not have the economy, culture, or demographics to endure such a move. Furthermore, it was implemented at the worst possible time from an economic standpoint, in the middle of a global economic downturn and right before the collapse of oil prices. ---
9/7/2016 2:09:16 PM
i'm hoping that someone has pointed out to NeuseRvrRat that the kind of "socialism" that sanders wants is still capitalism[Edited on September 9, 2016 at 10:52 AM. Reason : but i don't feel like reading this thread]
9/9/2016 10:52:27 AM
Either the state controls the means of production or they don't.
9/9/2016 1:43:24 PM
So for Bernie, that's a no? I don't recall any of his policies calling for nationalizing private companies.
9/9/2016 1:47:36 PM
Sanders did call for socialism a lot...he has a newer dictionary it seems. I think we can all rest better at night knowing that state ownership of the means of production has been so thoroughly thrown upon the trash-heap of history that welfare state supporters feel safe taking over the name.
9/9/2016 1:56:55 PM
9/9/2016 2:19:33 PM
we have a lot of people who voted for a self-described socialist in the democratic primary
9/9/2016 2:47:35 PM
and plenty of democrats vote for republicans and plenty of republicans vote for libertarians and so on and so on. they don't have to change their party to do so.if you wanted to make a thread mocking Bernie for what you feel is his incorrect usage of the word socialism you should have done that.[Edited on September 9, 2016 at 2:56 PM. Reason : I also love how GrumpyGOP addressed the OP's question at length, but obviously that's not what this thread is about as no one can or is responding to him ]]
9/9/2016 2:53:01 PM
9/9/2016 3:34:28 PM
It's kinda like when Gary Johnson calls himself a libertarian but then throws a shit ton of people in jail on three-strikes sentencing policies and thinks it's ok to execute minors.
9/9/2016 3:45:01 PM
haha yep
9/9/2016 3:49:39 PM
Excellent work dtownral. So it seems the United States has been a socialist state since its inception. Now, what is the word we should use for majority state ownership of the means of production? That is what we will soon find in Venezuela as the private sector continues to be destroyed by state policy, at some point the state owned oil sector will actually represent the majority of GDP.
9/10/2016 11:43:41 AM
Is it our fault that you don't know what words mean?
9/10/2016 8:27:41 PM
again, why define socialism by its failures and not its many successes?
9/10/2016 11:05:54 PM
Singapore may be a good example of a state owned by private enterprise, rather than the other way around.
9/11/2016 9:52:43 AM
9/15/2016 1:48:59 AM
i was talking about the housing industry being socialist in singapore. not the whole country. and we've seen too many examples of socialism being a wild success when enacted on sectors that provide neccessities to the population. we don't want to rely on the market to determine if someone gets to have a life or not. Thats why every country has some sort of socialism. you just can't count on the market. op suggested that we would try to implement venezuelan socilism but in reality we only want to socialize certain sectors.
9/16/2016 1:16:15 AM
^^Yes, because privately run corporation have such a great track record for doing government work.
9/16/2016 5:21:50 PM
^ They kinda do. Lots of cities are contracting out various functions, from education to fire services. If they don't perform, they get fired.
9/16/2016 11:05:04 PM
I can't figure out if you're being clever by arguing semantics or if you just don't have the facts straight. Depending on where you get the information, 82-87% of Singapore lives in public housing. 95% of these people "own" their government home on the basis of a 99 year lease but there is no private ownership of land. The government owns all of the land. I think its fair to say the government owns the means of production when they are responsible for over 80% of the market.
9/21/2016 8:48:29 PM
A case of me absolutely not having the facts straight. I didn't read deep enough into the wikipedia, only catching the 97% of all housing being privately owned, asterix asterix. So, okay, I'll give you that it sure seems that Singapore's housing sector is predominantly a form of socialism. How is that working? Well, the usual judge of how a market is operating is based upon prevailing prices and quality, such as living space per person. As it happens, after a short time with google, it seems Singapore often rates as the most expensive city to live in on the planet. Which means, to put it another way, Singapore contains the least functional housing market on the planet which is chronically under-supplying housing to a far greater extent than anywhere else.
9/22/2016 6:56:14 PM
9/22/2016 9:46:10 PM
9/23/2016 9:59:55 AM