投资报告:2018年委内瑞拉投资环境报告(英文版)
Executive Summary
Venezuela is located on the northern coast of South America. Political tensions, state interventions in the economy, macroeconomic distortions, physical insecurity, corruption, interruptions in the supply of electricity, a challenging labor environment, and a volatile and non-transparent regulatory framework make Venezuela a restrictive climate for foreign investors. Conditions for foreign investment are likely to deteriorate in the near term. Low global oil prices have aggravated Venezuela’s economic crisis as have corruption and chronic mismanagement of the oil production sector by the Venezuelan government. According to Central Bank of Venezuela (BCV), the country finished 2016 with an estimated 16.5 percent economic contraction and 274.4 percent inflation. In the absence of official GDP or inflation figures for 2017, local economic consulting firms estimated the economy shrank at least 12 percent, with inflation over 2,000 percent, while widespread shortages of consumer goods continued. The IMF estimates 2018 inflation will surpass 13,000 percent, and the economy will contract a further 15 percent. The Venezuelan government and the state oil company both entered selected default in November 2017 after missing payments on their U.S. dollar bonds, although creditors have not yet sought legal action. Financial analysts have raised concerns that strains on Venezuela’s foreign currency resources could exacerbate shortages of consumer goods and potentially force a more extended default on its external debt.
The energy sector dominates Venezuela’s import-dependent economy; the petroleum industry provides roughly 94 percent of export earnings, 40 percent of government revenues, and 11 percent of GDP. Falling petroleum export revenues and a corruption-plagued, mismanaged foreign exchange regime have deprived multinational firms of hard currency to repatriate earnings and import inputs and finished goods. Insufficient access to hard currency, price controls, and rigid labor regulations have compelled U.S. and multinational firms to reduce or shut down their Venezuelan operations, while high costs for oil production and state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela's (PDVSA’s) poor management and cash flow have slowed investment in the petroleum sector. Venezuela has traditionally been a destination for U.S. direct investment, especially in energy and manufacturing, and for exports of U.S. machinery, medical supplies, chemicals, agricultural products, and vehicles. Such investment and trade links have weakened in recent years by the Venezuelan government’s (GBRV’s) efforts to build commercial relationships with ideological allies, strained U.S.-Venezuelan relations, and the deteriorating investment climate.
Under President Nicolas Maduro, the GBRV’s policy response to Venezuela’s economic crisis has centered on increasing state control over the economy. President Maduro has used decree powers to pass laws that erode foreign investors’ rights; deepen the state’s role as the primary buyer and marketer of imports; tighten the currency control regime; and empower the GBRV to cap business profits and regulate prices throughout the economy. In early 2016, the GBRV opened a new alternative foreign exchange mechanism for the private sector to buy and sell dollars. The president announced slight adjustments to the foreign exchange system in March 2017 and again in February 2018, but analysts doubt it will result in improved access to U.S. dollars since the system lacks transparency and has attracted limited hard currency. The GBRV has implemented new laws and regulations to varying degrees, and their staying power remains unproven, increasing uncertainty in the investment climate.
In 2017, Venezuela passed a new Foreign Direct Investment Law that repealed and replaced the 2014 Foreign Investment Law. The new law adds some details and definitions absent from the previous version, but also places additional government control over investment. Some clarifications about its implementation and operational mechanisms were reportedly still not yet available as of this report’s publishing.
On August 25, the United States applied financial sanctions against Venezuela, which prohibited U.S. individuals and entities from providing new financing, dealing in certain existing bonds, and distributing dividend payments to the government of Venezuela. While commercial transactions with the Venezuelan government are not impacted, joint ventures and other partnerships with the Venezuelan government or its subsidiaries could be prohibited activities. The United States, as well as more than thirty other countries, has also announced individual sanctions against high-ranking Venezuelan officials that could also impact U.S. persons and entities interested in doing business with the Venezuelan government.
U.S. and multinational firms considering doing business in Venezuela should carefully weigh the risks posed by an ongoing economic crisis, a non-transparent and heavily if unevenly regulated operating environment, sanctions imposed by the United States and other countries against Venezuela’s government and its officials, and a foreign exchange regime that strictly limits access to hard currency.
Table 1
Measure | Year | Index/Rank | Website Address |
TI Corruption Perceptions Index | 2017 | 169 of 175 | |
World Bank’s Doing Business Report “Ease of Doing Business” | 2017 | 188 of 190 | |
Global Innovation Index | 2016 | 120 of 128 | |
U.S. FDI in Partner Country ($M USD, stock positions) | 2016 | $4,379 | |
World Bank GNI per capita | 2013 | $11,760 |
1. Openness To, and Restrictions Upon, Foreign Investment
Policies Towards Foreign Direct Investment
Despite government rhetoric welcoming foreign investment, the GBRV has thus far remained unwilling to adopt systemic changes to protect and promote foreign investment. The 1999 constitution generally provides for equal treatment of foreign and domestic investment. Article 301 provides for equal treatment of national and foreign investment. Article 302 reserves the petroleum industry and other strategic sectors of public interest for the state. A 2014 Foreign Investment Law reduced statutory rights of foreign investors. Meanwhile, the 2017 Foreign Investment Law (the Constitutional Law for Foreign Direct Investment) passed by the illegitimate National Constituent Assembly adds new minimum requirements for investors. The Venezuelan industry association CONINDUSTRIA (Confederacion Venezolana de Industriales) estimates that there were 700 state interventions (nationalizations or other seizures of private property) during the period 2002 to 2016. CONAPRI (Consejo Nacional de de Promocion de Inversiones), an independent investment promotion agency that has monitored the investment climate for the last 26 years and has consulted the GBRV on investment matters, has limited bandwidth for promoting investment. Article 16 of the 2017 Foreign Investment Law says an “annual plan to promote foreign productive investment” will be created by the GBRV, but no additional details were provided.
Limits on Foreign Control and Right to Private Ownership and Establishment
A 2014 Foreign Investment Law reduced foreign investors’ statutory rights compared to the prior regime. Regulations in the 2017 law more or less follow suit with those of the 2014 law; however, there are some notable differences. The new law designated the Ministry of Trade and Investment (Ministerio del Poder Popular para Comercio Exterior e Inversion Internacional- MPPCOEXIN) as the regulatory authority for foreign investment, replacing the Venezuelan currency commission, the National Center for Foreign Commerce (CENCOEX). CENCOEX still handles investment issues related to imports. The Petroleum and Mining Ministry and the Economy, Finance, and Public Banking Ministry have concurrent authority with MPPCOEXIN for regulating their respective sectors, and prospective investors must seek guidance from those specific ministries first. Private sector sources anticipate the 2017 law will expand state control over foreign investments in Venezuela. See Section “Laws and Regulations on Foreign Direct Investment” for more details on specifics. Express limits on foreign ownership of investments are generally found in the energy and mining sector.
Energy and Mining
The GBRV retains state control of the hydrocarbons sector. The 2001 hydrocarbons law reserved for the state the rights of exploration, production, transportation and storage of petroleum and associated natural gas. Under these regulations, hydrocarbon activities must be carried out by state-owned enterprises such as PDVSA, or by a public-private partnership with at least 50 percent state ownership.
In 2005, the GBRV informed companies operating under service contracts that they needed to convert their existing contracts into joint ventures to conform to the 2001 Hydrocarbons Law. That same year, the Venezuelan government threatened to seize 33 services contracts if these foreign investors did not migrate their existing contracts to the new format. Sixteen of those oil companies signed memoranda of understanding, converting their contracts to joint ventures. Minority partners seeking to exit joint venture investments in the petroleum sector have faced difficulties securing requisite GBRV approval to do so.
In contrast to the framework for petroleum, the 1999 Gaseous Hydrocarbons Law offers more favorable terms to investors within the unassociated natural gas sector, which is mostly offshore. This law opened the sector to private investment, both domestic and foreign, and created a licensing system for exploration and production regulated by the former Ministry of Energy and Mines (now the Ministry of Petroleum). Venezuela retained ownership of all natural gas in place, but PDVSA involvement was not required for gas development projects (although the law allows PDVSA to back into 35 percent ownership of any natural gas project once the private partners have declared commerciality). The law prohibited vertical integration of the gas business from the wellhead to the consumer.
In 2008, the Organic Law on the Restructuring of the Internal Liquid Fuels Market came into effect. The law mandates government control of domestic transportation and wholesale of liquid fuels and set a 60-day period for negotiations with the affected companies. The law does not define liquid fuels, which created uncertainty as to whether it applies to products other than gasoline and diesel fuel. This law affected companies that had investments in the downstream sector.
In 2009, Venezuela enacted the Organic Law that Reserves to the State the Assets and Services Related to Hydrocarbon Primary Activities. The law affected petroleum service companies involved in the injection of water, steam, or gas as secondary recovery methods, as well as services rendered for the performance of primary activities on Lake Maracaibo. It provided for the rendering of contracts previously executed between PDVSA and private companies. All contracts and activities governed by this law are subject to domestic law and are the exclusive jurisdiction of Venezuelan courts. The GBRV nationalized more than 75 companies, including three U.S. firms. In 2014, the GBRV announced it had reached an agreement to compensate the Venezuelan owners of a small number of the expropriated firms.
Despite Venezuela’s expropriations in the petroleum sector and the costly and difficult operating environment, since 2009, several international companies have agreed to create joint venture companies with PDVSA to extract crude oil. A number of these joint ventures are in the Orinoco Heavy Oil Belt (Faja del Orinoco), where most of Venezuela’s reserves are located. Venezuela’s oil production and reserves also account for the continued presence of major foreign oilfield service companies. Nevertheless, some service companies operating in Venezuela have left and others have shrunk due to the problem of late payments from PDVSA that began in late 2008, nationalizations, and the threat of nationalizations.
In 2009, Venezuela's Organic Law for the Development of Petrochemical Activities entered into force. The law reserves basic and intermediate petrochemical activities to the state. It allows the state, through the Ministry of Petroleum, to create mixed companies in which the GBRV will control at least 50 percent of the shareholder equity and exercise effective control over company decisions. Such mixed companies can only exist for a maximum of 25 years, extendable for periods of 15 years by mutual agreement of the parties and with national assembly approval.
The GBRV has modified laws and regulations, and adjusted loan terms with foreign oil companies, to encourage investment in the energy sector. The GBRV revised in February 2013 the Law of Special Contributions for Extraordinary and Exorbitant Prices, commonly called the windfall profit tax. The revision reduced the measure’s tax burden by raising the price per barrel at which a graduated scale of tax rates would apply. The rates are 20 percent for USD 60-80/barrel; 80 percent for USD 81-100/barrel; 90 percent for USD 101-110/barrel; and 95 percent for more than USD 110/barrel. Foreign companies involved in joint ventures to develop the Orinoco Heavy Oil Belt have sought GBRV clarification regarding whether the new windfall profit tax rates would apply to the joint ventures’ production of extra-heavy crude.
Since the December 2015 opposition coalition victory in the National Assembly, there have been public discussions about the executive branch’s ability to enter into contracts of national interest, including joint ventures in the extractive sector, without legislative approval. In February 2016, President Maduro declared through decree powers that the Mining Arc of Orinoco, a 111,843 square kilometer zone in Bolivar State, was certified for exploitation and presented favorable investment terms to certain international mining companies. The opposition-controlled National Assembly has repeatedly warned that contracts signed between the executive branch and foreign companies without the legislature’s approval would not be honored by future governments. See the section on the transparency of the regulatory system for more information.
In December 2017, a new illegitimate legislative body called the National Constituent Assembly (ANC) passed a law entitled “Ley del Regimen Tributario en el Desarrollo Soberano del Arco Minero del Orinoco,” which decreed that all mining operations in the Orinoco region required at least 55 percent GBRV ownership. Article 2 established the taxable rates for joint ventures and for state companies and institutions. These rates, the law refers, will be established by the president of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, when these companies produce and process a certain amount of gold. Companies that export must provide an annual sworn statement promising their investment amount each year. The law also claims to promote alliances between the GBRV and smaller, more informal mining operations.
Other Investment Policy Reviews
The World Trade Organization (WTO) last conducted a Trade Policy Review of Venezuela in 2002.
Business Facilitation
Starting and owning a business in Venezuela remains a challenging endeavor. Utilizing the services of a lawyer is necessary to navigate the time-consuming process. Venezuela is ranked 188 of 190 overall in the World Bank’s 2017 Doing Business report and is ranked last in the ease of starting a business. On average, starting a business takes 20 procedures and 230 days. The first step involves reserving a company name through the Commercial Registry (Registro Mercantil) which has some information online (http://www.saren.gob.ve/) but remains a largely manual process.
A 2017 Foreign Investment Law passed by the illegitimate ANC requires foreign investors to enroll in a new registry and sign an investment contract with the GBRV; however, these operational mechanisms have yet to be created. Prospective investors should consult MPPCOEXIN or the ministry in charge of the respective sector for guidance.
There are a variety of small-scale public and private initiatives dedicated to promoting the participation of women and minorities in the economy, but these efforts are mostly isolated. There is no formal business facilitation mechanism to provide for the equitable treatment of these groups to date.
Outward Investment
No formal outward investment is promoted or incentivized in Venezuela. Domestic investors are not restricted from investing abroad, but the tight restrictions on obtaining foreign currency hinder such efforts.
2. Bilateral Investment Agreements and Taxation Treaties
Venezuela has bilateral investment treaties with Argentina, Barbados, Belarus, Belgium and Luxembourg, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Costa Rica, Cuba, Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, France, Germany, Iran, Islamic Republic, Italy, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Paraguay, Peru, Portugal, Russian Federation, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, Uruguay, and Vietnam.
Effective November 1, 2008, Venezuela revoked its Bilateral Investment Treaty with the Netherlands. Revocation did not have immediate consequences for investments made prior to the date of revocation. The BIT remains in force for these investments for a period of 15 years.
The United States and Venezuela have a bilateral tax treaty for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with Respect to Taxes on Income and Capital, signed in 1999. The provisions of the treaty apply to the following taxes in existence at the time of the entry into force: a) in Venezuela: the tax on income and the business assets tax; b) in the United States: the Federal income taxes imposed by the Internal Revenue Code (but excluding social security contributions), and to any identical or substantially similar taxes that imposed after the date of signature.
3. Legal Regime
Transparency of the Regulatory System
Venezuela’s regulatory and legal system lacks transparency, is unpredictable, and suffers from corruption. The GBRV’s ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) and its allies control the executive branch, including all regulatory agencies, the judiciary, the electoral authority, and a theoretically independent branch composed of the Attorney General, the Comptroller General, and the Public Defender (or ombudsman). International observers believe the executive branch exercises undue influence over the judicial, regulatory, and electoral authorities. In December 2015 a coalition of opposition parties won control of the National Assembly. Proposed laws are generally presented for two rounds of discussion in the National Assembly, but the PSUV-dominated Supreme Court has struck down all laws that the opposition-controlled National Assembly has passed, to date. The Supreme Court has ruled that the president has the ability to issue new laws by decree, circumventing the normal legislative process.
By presidential decree, Maduro initiated the establishment of the National Constituent Assembly (ANC) in July 2017 outside of Venezuela’s constitutional framework with the directive of re-writing Venezuela’s constitution. The illegitimate ANC has since created numerous other laws, including the 2017 Foreign Investment Law, further eliminating the National Assembly’s role. These legislative processes were not transparent and did not allow room for public comment. These regulations were not data-driven, but rather created to serve the political agenda of the Maduro regime. Executive agencies generally develop and promulgate implementing regulations without consulting private sector representatives of the affected sectors. Regulations are inconsistently enforced, and the 2017 Foreign Investment Law does not mention an enforcement mechanism. It is unknown as to whether such information will follow in supplemental documents. The law does mention the application of fines for violating it statutes, but it does not describe how they would be levied. Laws and regulations are published as official gazettes and can be found online at http://www.imprentanacional.gob.ve/.
International Regulatory Considerations
Venezuela is a member of the Southern Common Market (Mercosur), a full customs union and a trading bloc. After joining in July 2012, Venezuela had four years to fully adopt the trade bloc regulations. Venezuela’s membership was suspended in December 2016 due to its failure to implement 200 Mercosur norms and regulations. While Venezuela is no longer a voting member of Mercosur, in practice, commercial and trade operations remain relatively unchanged. Venezuela has been a member of the World Trade Organization since 1995.
Legal System and Judicial Independence
Venezuela’s legal system is based on the civil law tradition, reflecting Napoleonic and continental European influences. The commercial and civil codes address most business matters. The investment law stipulates that foreign investments shall be subject to the jurisdiction of Venezuelan courts and any bodies in which Venezuela might participate within the framework of Latin American and Caribbean integration. Venezuelan legal analysts have conflicting views regarding whether the law eliminates the possibility of arbitration. The legal system is generally slow and inefficient, and lacks independence from the executive branch.
International Arbitration
Venezuelan law provides for commercial arbitration, based on UNCITRAL’s model arbitration law. The private sector Venezuelan Business Center of Arbitration and Conciliation (CEDCA) offers arbitration services. Additional information is available at http://www.cedca.org.ve/. Venezuela withdrew from the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) in 2012.
The 2017 Foreign Investment Law states, “Provided that the internal judicial remedies have been exhausted and previously agreed upon, the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela may participate and make use of other dispute resolution mechanisms built within the framework of the integration of Latin America and the Caribbean, as well as in the framework of other integration schemes.”
Laws and Regulations on Foreign Direct Investment
Navigating the various investment law requirements remains challenging (see section on Limits on Foreign Control and Right to Private Ownership and Establishment). Obtaining legal counsel is recommended to ensure compliance with laws and regulations. Additionally, the 2017 Foreign Investment Law was passed by the illegitimate ANC, a legislature not recognized by most of the world. Its policies are described below. A description of the guidelines for foreign investment under the prior Foreign Investment Law of 2014 can be obtained by reading the 2017 Investment Climate Statement.
The 2017 Foreign Investment Law designates MPPCOEXIN as the regulatory authority for foreign investment. This law stipulates the following legal entities and physical persons are subject to its measures; foreign businesses (51 percent or more owned by non-Venezuelans) and their affiliates and subsidiaries (50 percent or more owned by a foreign business); national companies subject to a strategic plan by two or more states; national companies that capture foreign investment as defined by the law; Venezuelans and non-Venezuelans residents abroad who invest in Venezuela; non-Venezuelans resident in Venezuela who undertake investments in Venezuela. The law defines an investment as “those resources lawfully obtained and destined by a national or foreign investor to the production of goods and services, incorporating raw materials or intermediate and final products with emphasis on those of origin or national manufacture, which contribute to the creation of decent work, promotion of small and medium industry, endogenous productive chains, as well as the development of productive innovation.”
Foreign investment must be for a minimum value of eight hundred thousand euros (€ 800,000) or six million five hundred thousand renminbi (6,500,000) or its equivalent in another foreign currency. The investment must be for at least two years. MPPCOEXIN may exceptionally approve an investment of no less than ten percent of the amount described above for the promotion of SMEs. Upon completion of the two-year period, investors may, upon payment of taxes and other liabilities, make remittances abroad.
Foreign investors will have the right to remit abroad annually 100 percent of the proven profits or dividends that come from their foreign investment in freely convertible currencies. However, in cases of “force majeure or extraordinary economic conditions,” the National Executive may reduce this percentage between 60 percent and 80 percent of the profits.
By law, all foreign investors must contribute to the production of goods and services to satisfy domestic demand and promote non-traditional exports; aid in economic development, research, and innovation; participate in Venezuelan government economic policies; implement responsible business conduct programs consistent with international standards; and align to the objectives of Venezuela’s national economic policy.
A notable addition to the 2017 Foreign Investment Law is the explicit prohibition of foreign investors’ involvement in “political debate.” “They cannot participate directly or indirectly in the national political debate or contribute directly or indirectly to the formation of opinions on topics of public interest in the media.” In addition, “companies and their representatives in their capacity as representatives of the same or using the links generated by it may not contribute through donations, contributions, rents and/or logistical facilities, with institutions public or private, or non-governmental organization.” Failure to comply subjects a foreign investor to revocation of the foreign investment registration and monetary fines.
Foreign investors will enjoy rights as foreign investors once MPPCOEXIN or another competent authority provides them with a foreign investment registration. ProVenezuela, the GBRV’s new investment and export promotion agency, will supposedly be in charge of registration. However, the new Foreign Investment Registry and associated contractual process is not yet complete.
Competition and Anti-Trust Laws
Procompetencia, the Superintendence for the Promotion and Protection of Free Competition, was previously the government agency responsible for regulating businesses to ensure competition exists to benefit consumers and producers. Procompetencia has since been rebranded as the Anti-Monopoly Superintendence with the slogan “Combating the Economic War.” Information regarding this organization is limited, and the website no longer functions.
Expropriation and Compensation
According to the Law on Expropriation for Public Cause or Social Use (2002), Article 2 explains that expropriation is justified when the State acts “for the benefit of a public or social interest” and can be undertaken through the forced transfer of property or other rights of individuals to the government pending a final judgment by the judiciary and “timely” payment of fair compensation.
Article 3 states that assets are considered of public interest/use when they directly provide uses or improvements for common benefit. This executive power has been interpreted broadly, used regularly as a threat to force businesses to act in accordance with the government’s wishes, and carried out frequently in the last fifteen years. In many cases, companies have argued that they have not received the payment of adequate compensation, if any, and foreign companies regularly seek judicial rulings on expropriation outside Venezuela’s jurisdiction when possible (see below).
Dispute Settlement
The industry association CONINDUSTRIA (Confederacion Venezolana de Industriales) estimates that there were 700 state interventions (nationalizations or other seizures of private property) during the period 2002 to 2016. The GBRV has not specifically targeted U.S. firms in its expropriations, but many expropriations and investment disputes have involved U.S. businesses. At least five investment disputes involving firms with U.S. affiliations are ongoing at the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID).
ICSID Convention and New York Convention
On January 24, 2012, the GBRV withdrew as a member state from the ICSID Convention. Twenty-four cases pending before ICSID remain active. These pending cases are not affected by Venezuela’s renunciation of the ICSID convention. Between the date of the notice of renunciation and the date when it became effective, foreign investors had an additional six months to file new claims against Venezuela. Because the U.S. and Venezuela do not have a bilateral investment treaty, ICSID may not have jurisdiction to consider claims raised by U.S. businesses against the GBRV. Some businesses have instead filed claims based on the jurisdiction in which subsidiaries of the U.S. based parent corporation are located, when a bilateral investment treaty is in place in that jurisdiction. Since 2013, ICSID has returned judgments in favor of several claimants. The GBRV has sought to annul ICSID’s judgments within the ICSID forum and to challenge claimants’ efforts to enforce the judgments in U.S. and European courts.
Venezuela is a signatory to the convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (1958 New York Convention) and a member of the International Chamber of Commerce’s International Court of Arbitration, which covers commercial disputes.
Investor-State Dispute Settlement
The U.S. does not have a Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) or Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with Venezuela. Numerous investment disputes involving U.S. companies have occurred over the past 10 years. Venezuela has a history of extrajudicial action against foreign investors.
International Commercial Arbitration and Foreign Courts
No alternative dispute solution mechanisms are available as a means to settle disputes between two private parties. Venezuelan court processes are not transparent or consistent in their methods of reaching decisions.
Bankruptcy Regulations
Venezuela’s bankruptcy laws are outdated and inadequate to permit the reorganization of a debtor as a going concern. Insolvent companies that file for bankruptcy or reorganization generally lose control of their businesses and assets to a receiver and a bankruptcy judge, giving creditors fewer options to assert their interests in the process, compared to bankruptcy proceedings in other jurisdictions. All financial and commercial unsecured creditors are treated equally, but they are subordinated to the debtor’s employees, who are due unpaid wages and other labor benefits, as well as to certain taxes. The bankruptcy trustee and advisors also have a statutory preference over all other creditors. Under the commercial code, all creditors that are not secured by a legal and valid security interest, or have a preference as mandated by law (e.g., the debtor’s employees) must be treated equally by the bankruptcy court. Lawyers say Venezuela’s bankruptcy laws incentivize debtors and creditors to negotiate settlements outside the context of formal bankruptcy proceedings.
4. Industrial Policies
Investment Incentives
The 2017 Foreign Investment Law calls for the promotion of investment along with the creation of “a program for special benefits granted to foreign investments.” On April 27, the GBRV announced the creation of investment and export agency ProVenezuela. No additional details on investment are yet available.
Updated information on investment promotion in Venezuela can be found at the MPPCOEXIN website:
http://portal.mippcoexin.gob.ve/web/i_special_provenezuela.php;
http://portal.mippcoexin.gob.ve/web/p_especiales_1.php.
Foreign Trade Zones/Free Ports/Trade Facilitation
The Free Trade Zone Law provides for free trade zones and free ports. The three existing free trade zones are located in the Paraguana Peninsula, in the state of Falcon, which also has a tourism investment promotion provision; Atuja in the state of Zulia; and the municipalities of Libertador, Campo Elias, Sucre; and Santos Marquina in the state of Merida, but only for cultural, scientific, and technological goods. These zones provide exemptions from most import and export duties and offer foreign-owned firms the same investment opportunities as Venezuelan firms. Venezuela has two free ports that also enjoy exemptions from some tariff duties: Margarita Island (part of Nueva Esparta state) and Santa Elena de Uairen in the state of Bolivar. However, stakeholders have stated the GBRV has not focused on developing these ports and free trade zones
Performance and Data Localization Requirements
Venezuela’s 2017 Foreign Investment Law contains mandatory language regarding the development of local suppliers, domestic research and development, and non-traditional exports, but it remains to be determined whether the GBRV will enforce these rules in a manner that constitutes a local content requirement. Venezuela's telecommunications law gives regulatory authorities powers to access and intervene in telecommunications infrastructure and services in the interest of national security, defense, and public order. Venezuela's law against computer crimes criminalizes a range of conducts, including unauthorized access to systems, espionage, and sabotage. No information is available regarding requirements that foreign investors store data in Venezuela, although anecdotally many foreign firms store data outside the country.
5. Protection of Property Rights
Real Property
Expropriations, weak public sector institutions, corruption, and lack of judicial independence undermine real property rights in Venezuela. Mortgages and property liens exist. Real estate lawyers say land registries are generally reliable, although in some cases are subject to abuse and corruption. In 2018, the World Bank ranked Venezuela 135 out of 190 countries for ease of registering property. The World Bank said registering a property interest takes nine administrative procedures, 52 days, and costs 2.7 percent of the property value. Venezuela has a law on indigenous land rights which provides general definitions of indigenous peoples’ lands and use rights and assigns the laws implementation to the environment ministry. Data are unavailable on the percentage of Venezuelan land lacking clear title.
Intellectual Property Rights
Venezuela’s Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) regime remains inefficient and ineffective. There is no indication of forthcoming IP reforms, and Venezuela remained on USTR’s 2018 Special 301 Priority Watch List. Venezuela’s 1955 Industrial Property Law (IPL), the primary IPR legislation governing trademarks and patents, conflicts with the 1999 Venezuelan Constitution, domestic labor law, and international agreements to which Venezuela is a signatory. In its current form, the IPL is outdated and incapable of addressing modern IPR issues. It also conflicts with the WTO Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Agreement. The 2012 Organic Law of Labor and Workers further complicated Venezuela’s IPR regime because article 325 provides that any intellectual property generated by public sector entities, or using public sector funds, automatically becomes part of the public domain. In 2016, renewed efforts by the National Assembly to update Venezuelan IPR law to bring it into compliance with international standards stalled as other more pressing social, political, and economic issues took priority.
In July 2012, recognizing the 1955 IPL was outdated and at odds with multiple national and international legal structures, the Venezuelan Supreme Court (TSJ) urged the National Assembly to revise the industrial property law and reconcile it with Article 98 of the 1999 constitution. However, the initiative failed and there have been no new developments since 2014. In 2015, the Autonomous Intellectual Property Service (SAPI) adjusted the fee structure for patents and trademarks, forcing all foreign rights holders to pay fees in dollars at the strongest exchange rate, DIPRO. The January 2018 elimination of the DIPRO rate is a step in the right direction and could bode well for foreign clients, but the outcome is still uncertain. Increased enforcement efforts coupled with capacity building of relevant agencies and officials that occurred in 2016 have lost their vigor and have shown minimal impact.
As a WTO member, the GBRV is obligated to adhere to the requirement of the TRIPS Agreement. However, its failure to grant any patents since 2007 violates TRIPS Articles 2.1 and 62.2. SAPI has begun to approve some specific design-related cases, but all other types of patents continue to be denied or remain in limbo. Venezuela is a member of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). It is also a party to the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, the Convention for the Protection of Producers of Phonograms against Unauthorized Duplication of Their Phonograms, the Universal Copyright Convention, Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property, and the Rome Convention for the Protection of Performers, Producers of Phonograms, and Broadcasting Organizations. Venezuela has not ratified the WIPO Copyright Treaty or the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty, nor is it a party to the Madrid Protocol on Trademarks or the Patent Law Treaty.
According to a multi-year study by the Business Software Alliance (BSA) released in 2015, Venezuela ranked as one of the top 20 economies worldwide for unlicensed software and an estimated 87 percent of the software used in Venezuela was unlicensed. The commercial value, if all unlicensed products were purchased legally, would be roughly USD2.78. No Venezuelan markets were identified in 2017’s U.S. Department of Commerce “Notorious Markets” Report. The World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Report for 2017-2018 ranked Venezuela last out of 137 countries in IP protection for the fifth straight year. The Property Rights Alliance’s 2017 International Property Rights Index (IPRI) ranked Venezuela 126 out of 128 countries.
Patents and Trademarks
SAPI has issued no new patents since 2007 with the exception of some design-related cases. Venezuela’s 1955 IPL provides that patents of invention, improvement, model, or industrial drawing are valid for five or ten years, depending on the preference of the filer. Patents for technologies developed abroad may be valid for five years or until the original foreign patent term expires, whichever is shorter. These patent durations violate the 20-year patent-term required under the TRIPS Agreement. Article 15 of the IPL excludes several items, including medicine and pharmaceuticals, financial systems and plans, industrial processes, and speculative or theoretical inventions, from patent protection in violation of Article 27 of the TRIPS Agreement.
Venezuelan IP lawyers note that SAPI’s handling of trademarks is less hostile to rights-holders than its handling of patents, but trademark issues continue to be a problem. Trademarks must be filed with SAPI and published in SAPI’s official Gazette. SAPI grants trademarks for 15 years, and they may be renewed for successive 15-year periods. Trademarks are valid from the date SAPI publishes them in its bulletin. The registration process averages 12-14 months, but the process can take significantly longer if a third party opposes the registration. SAPI continues to reject, under Article 33 of the IPL, most applications for trademarks bearing geographical indications. Data provided by IP attorneys show a steady decline of trademark registrations, from 29,278 in 2005 to 19,600 in 2016. The decrease is due, in part, to companies pursuing trademarks in other Andean countries such as Colombia where IP laws have more clarity and stronger enforcement. From a legal perspective, companies feel trademarks obtained in other AC countries may still be enforceable in Venezuela at a later date. In addition, a fee structure initiated in May 2015 forced foreign rights holders to pay patent and trademark fees in U.S. dollars calculated at the overvalued DIPRO exchange rate (10 bolivars/USD), resulting in foreign rights holders being charged some of the highest fees for IP protection in the world. As a result of Venezuela’s tiered exchange rates, foreign right holders were paying a minimum of 70 times more than national companies. Approximately 100 trademarks expired in 2017, but only 20 reapplied, with many likely deterred by the high fees.
On January 29, 2018, the GBRV eliminated DIPRO and unified its exchange rates. Currently, fees are being charged at the DICOM rate (presently 59,500 bolivars /1 USD). This change benefitted foreign rights holders, as fees previously costing $3,000 currently cost less than $1 under DICOM. However, this announcement substantially reduces SAPI’s revenue stream, which could impact its offering of services without additional adjustments to the payment structure.
Copyrights
Creative works are protected under the 1993 Copyright Law, the Berne Convention, and the Universal Copyright Convention. The law is modern and comprehensive and extends copyright protection to all creative works including computer software. However, trademark counterfeiting and piracy (including over the internet) remain widespread and enforcement is weak.
Enforcement
Increased efforts in capacity building by SAPI, which intiated a “one-stop” IP website to serve as an electronic portal for conducting IP business in Venezuela, including online learning, has lost momentum and has made little progress. SAPI sent some higher-level officials to WIPO training events, but working-level adjudicators that are responsible for approving patents and trademarks remain poorly trained, with the more-experienced and talented employees either leaving the country or retiring.
The lengthy legal processes, inexperienced judges, and insufficient investigative and prosecutorial resources significantly hamper IP enforcement in Venezuela. Companies are discouraged from pursuing lawsuits to enforce IP rights due to the slow, uncertain, and unclear legal framework. The GBRV abolished the Venezuelan copyright and trademark enforcement branch of the federal police in 2010. Victims of IP theft must sue infringers in order to trigger judicial injunction. SENIAT, the Venezuelan tax and customs authority, has the power to seize goods belonging to infringers at ports. Legal experts note that IP laws are unevenly enforced and cases can take years to resolve without guarantee of a positive outcome. IP lawyers report that the IPR review and appeal process takes on average 13 years, so slow and the penalties are so low that the system does not deter counterfeiters. Local attorneys report that rights owners can, and often prefer to, settle disputes out of the court system due to cumbersome bureaucratic steps.
Data from industry representatives indicates that copyright piracy, including piracy over the Internet, and trademark counterfeiting remains widespread. Venezuela remains non-compliant with Section Four, Part Three, of the TRIPS Agreement, which mandates special requirements related to border enforcement measures.
For additional information about treaty obligations and points of contact at local IP offices, please see WIPO’s country profiles at http://www.wipo.int/directory/en/.
Resources for Rights Holders
Embassy Caracas Economic Section: CaracasEcon@state.gov, 58-0212-975-8402;
The Venezuelan-American Chamber of Commerce: www.VenAmCham.org;
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO): www.uspto.gov, 1-800-786-9199;
National Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center: www.iprcenter.gov;
International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce: www.stopfakes.gov.
For a list of local lawyers, please visit: http://photos.state.gov/libraries/venezuela/19452/public/Commercial_Law_Firms_List.pdf.
6. Financial Sector
Capital Markets and Portfolio Investment
Venezuela’s financial services sector is heavily regulated. In 2010 the GBRV passed laws to reform the financial sector, including the Organic Law of the National Financial System, the regulatory framework for banks, insurance companies, and the capital markets; the Law for Insurance Activity; the Capital Markets Law, which created a state-run Bicentennial Public Securities Exchange (BPVB); and the Law of Banking Sector Institutions. Financial services account for a relatively small but growing share of GDP. According to BCV data, financial services represented six percent of GDP in 2016, the latest data available. Financial services growth until 2014 was driven by increasing monetary liquidity (M2) resulting from loose fiscal and monetary policy and strict currency controls, which traps VEF earnings in Venezuela.
Venezuelan capital markets are underdeveloped and thinly traded. The leading Caracas stock market index, the Caracas Stock Exchange Index, increased over 16,000 percent year on year as of April 13, 2018. Private analysts attribute the rise to government spending-driven increases in M2 and currency controls that trap the liquidity in Venezuela, although Venezuela’s hyperinflation has eroded any local currency increase in real terms. Activity in Venezuela’s securities market has decreased in recent years due to nationalizations of previously listed firms and the GBRV’s seizure of 51 brokerages, since 2010, mostly on charges of illegal trading in a now defunct foreign exchange market.
Venezuela’s primary stock market is the Caracas Stock Exchange (BVC). On January 31, 2011, the GBRV launched the Bicentennial Public Securities Exchange (BPVB), to sell government and corporate bonds and to compete with the BVC. The BPVB was empowered to trade both VEF- and USD-denominated securities, but as of April 2018 it had only traded VEF-denominated debt. Private brokerages have not been allowed to participate in the BPVB. Trading volumes in both the BVC and the BPVB are low and dominated by fixed-income public- and private-sector securities offering negative real interest rates due to an excess of VEF liquidity trapped in Venezuela by currency controls.
Foreign investors can buy or sell stocks and bonds in Venezuelan capital markets as long as they have registered with the securities regulator, the Superintendent of Securities (SNV). Venezuela’s 2017 Foreign Investment Law requires foreign investors to obtain a foreign investment registration before they invest directly in Venezuelan firms.
Money and Banking System
Venezuelan credit markets are heavily regulated. The BCV and the Superintendent of Banks (SUDEBAN) regulate Venezuela’s banking sector. The 2010 law of banking sector institutions describes banking as a public service and banks as public utilities, permitting the GBRV to nationalize financial institutions without National Assembly approval. The public sector’s share of total bank assets has grown in recent years, primarily through GBRV nationalizations. According SUDEBAN data, in February 2018 there were 31 banking institutions – 24 private and 7 public – down from 59 in November 2009. Public-sector banks held an estimated 52 percent of total banking sector assets in February 2018.
Venezuela’s banking sector is heavily distorted by the GBRV’s and BCV’s expansive fiscal and monetary policies, which combined with currency controls trap local currency liquidity in the economy, fuel inflation, reduce loan default rates, and inflate banking sector profitability indicators. Universal and commercial banks enjoyed return on equity of roughly 24 percent in the twelve months to February 2018, with a sector-wide default rate of less than 1 percent, driven by M2 growth and currency controls that constrain capital transfers out of Venezuela. Financial analysts believe reform to the currency control regime would have to be paired with banking sector reforms to avoid widespread stress to the financial system.
The BCV sets maximum and minimum interest rates banks can charge. Limits, as of April 2018, included 24 percent on commercial and personal loans, 29 percent on credit cards, and 16 percent on car loans. With inflation of 274 percent in 2016 and estimated over 2,000 percent in 2017, real interest rates are negative, giving banks a disincentive to lend. Banks are required to allocate roughly 59 percent of their portfolio for loans to the housing, agriculture, small business, manufacturing, and tourism sectors, at preferential interest rates that have been negative, in real terms, since 2012. Universal and commercial banks are prohibited from making commercial loans for terms longer than three years. The BCV also regulates interest rates on savings accounts and time deposits. Limits as of April 2017 have included 16 percent on savings account balances from 0 to VEF 20,000, 12.5 percent on savings account balances above VEF 20,000, and 14.5 percent on certificates of deposit. Such rates have been negative, in real terms, since 2009, discouraging household saving and incentivizing domestic consumption and the purchase of USD in the parallel market as a more stable store of value. Faced with negative real interest rates on bank deposits and VEF-denominated securities, multinationals with VEF earnings trapped in Venezuela have increasingly invested in commercial real estate in an attempt to mitigate inflation risks.
Total banking assets, at roughly USD 15 billion (at the official DICOM VEF/USD exchange rate in February 2018), grew 3,445 percent in local currency from February 2017 to February 2018. Public and private universal and commercial banks control 99 percent of total banking sector assets. Banco de Venezuela holds 43 percent of total sector assets as of February 2018, followed by Banesco with 15 percent of total sector assets; Banco Provincial with 8 percent; and Banco Mercantil with 6 percent. Banesco and Mercantil are Venezuelan-owned, while Banco Provincial is majority owned by BBVA of Spain. Banco de Venezuela is the largest state universal bank. The GBRV nationalized it from Spain-based Banco Santander in May 2009. Citibank is the only U.S.-owned universal bank with a presence in Venezuela and accounts for 0.1 percent of total sector assets as of February 2018.
The BCV promulgated regulations in September 2012 outlining conditions under which businesses and individuals may open USD-denominated bank accounts at Venezuelan universal and commercial banks. Venezuelan residents may use such accounts for international transfers, overseas debit card transactions, and transactions through the DICOM FX mechanism (see Conversion and Transfer Policies). Venezuelans may not withdraw dollars from such accounts in Venezuela, however.
Foreign Exchange and Remittances
Foreign Exchange Policies
Since 2003, the GBRV has maintained strict currency controls. Venezuela’s foreign exchange (FX) regime has been in flux for several years, with multiple FX mechanisms and exchange rates introduced, modified, and eliminated. In February 2018, Venezuela again modified its official FX mechanisms and now manages just one official FX mechanism called DICOM. The BCV oversees a weekly auction to sell U.S. dollars to private sector firms and individuals. Under the new system, the FX offer comes from private companies and individuals instead of the government. Firms and individuals soliciting dollars from DICOM must register with the body. The BCV publishes the DICOM rate weekly. Ostensibly, a managed floating rate, it remains overvalued. As a result, access to hard currency for the private sector has been severely limited in the last year.
Remittance Policies
Foreign investors in Venezuela have struggled to convert their VEF earnings into USD. Since 2008, CENCOEX and its predecessor, CADIVI, virtually ceased approving the sale of USD for earnings or capital repatriation. Multinational firms have announced numerous accounting losses due to exchange rate depreciation. As a result, many multinational firms have deconsolidated their Venezuelan subsidiary from their global financial statements. The 2017 Foreign Investment Law states foreign investors will have the right to remit abroad annually 100 percent of the proven profits or dividends that come from their investment in freely convertible currencies. Legally, foreign investors could purchase dollars through DICOM to repatriate earnings, but DICOM has not been able to satisfy the demand for hard currency. There is also an unauthorized parallel market for dollars. Private websites hosted outside of Venezuela now publish different parallel exchange rates. One of the most popular, DolarToday, reported an exchange rate of 638,520 VEF/USD on April 25, 2018, a devaluation of 99.8% since April 25, 2016
The OECD’s Financial Action Task Force (FATF) announced in February 2013 that Venezuela was no longer subject to FATF’s global anti-money-laundering/combatting terrorist finance (AML/CFT) monitoring process. FATF noted Venezuela would continue to work with the Caribbean FATF regional body to address AML/CFT deficiencies identified in Venezuela’s mutual evaluation report.
Sovereign Wealth Funds
N/A
7. State-Owned Enterprises
State Owned Enterprises (SOEs) are dominant in diverse sectors of the Venezuelan economy, including agribusiness, food, hydrocarbons, media, mining, telecommunications, and tourism. Private firms are at a disadvantage when competing with public enterprises, specifically in terms of accessing foreign currency at the official exchange rate. SOEs historically did not need to go through CENCOEX or the BCV to request hard currency at the strongest official exchange rate, while private companies struggled with the official mechanisms’ limitations and process delays.
In March 2012, the GBRV amended its customs and tax regimes to favor imports by the public sector over those of the private sector. The new rules exempt SOE importers from providing certain customs documentation and grant waivers on value-added taxes, customs duties, and fees on a broad range of imported products. The exemptions do not generally apply to the private sector. The GBRV has extended such benefits to certain private-sector firms. Financial analysts generally believe Venezuela’s SOEs contribute to macroeconomic imbalances and undermine domestic output.
OECD Guidelines on Corporate Governance of SOEs
The GBRV does not encourage its SOEs to adhere to the OECD Guidelines on Corporate Governance for SOEs. The CEO of PDVSA and the rest of PDVSA’s board members are appointed by the President. GBRV direct appointment of SOE executives is commonplace, such as in the Venezuelan Corporation of Guayana (CVG), a state holding company that includes firms in basic industries such as aluminum, iron ore mining, electricity generation, and steel. Venezuela is not a party to the WTO’s Agreement on Government Procurement. Private sector firms are at a disadvantage vis-à-vis SOEs in Venezuelan courts.
Privatization Program
The GBRV does not have privatization programs in place.
8. Responsible Business Conduct
Article 135 of the Venezuelan constitution declares a general duty for all non-state actors to respect laws regarding social responsibility. Venezuela’s 2017 Foreign Investment Law requires foreign investors to promote responsible business conduct (RBC), but it does not specify what this means. Various Venezuelan laws set forth requirements intended to advance principles generally included under the concept of RBC. GBRV regulation and enforcement of these laws is weak and uneven.
The Venezuelan private sector is generally aware of and promotes RBC. The Venezuelan-American Chamber of Commerce (VenAmCham), for its part, promotes RBC though its Social Alliance program, which organizes RBC-themed events. The Venezuelan Federation of Chambers of Commerce (Fedecamaras) promotes RBC through a standing working group devoted to the dissemination of best practices and an annual award to recognize RBC excellence.
OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises
Venezuela does not encourage foreign or local firms to follow the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises or the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.
9. Corruption
Venezuela has comprehensive anti-corruption laws but enforcement is weak and inconsistent, as indicated by Venezuela’s ranking by Transparency International of 169 out of 180 countries in its 2017 corruption perceptions index. Corruption is endemic in Venezuela, including in government procurement; the awarding of authorizations, particularly in the foreign exchange regime; dispute settlement; the regulatory system; and customs and taxation. The GBRV does not provide protection to NGOs that investigate corruption and often subjects them to harassment. Many government watch groups warn the Venezuelan government selectively investigates corruption allocations for political reasons. Increasing numbers of government employees, including both low and high-ranking officials at state-owned oil company PDVSA, have been arrested over the past year on corruption charges.
UN Anticorruption Convention, OECD Convention on Combatting Bribery
Venezuela signed the UN Convention against Corruption on December 10, 2003, and ratified it on February 2, 2009. Venezuela has not adopted the OECD Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials in International Business Transactions.
Resources to Report Corruption
The GBRV's Public Ministry, roughly equivalent to the U.S. Attorney General's Office, has telephonic and e-mail resources for victims to report crimes, including corruption. The Public Ministry's contact information is:
Sede Principal del Ministerio Publico
Esquinas de Misericordia a Pele El Ojo y Avenida Mexico
Caracas
58-0212-509-7211 (main)
58-0212-509-7464 (main)
58-0-800-FISCA-00 (speak to a Public Ministry attorney)
58-0-800-VICTIMA (victim hotline)
mp@mp.gob.ve
Transparency International’s Venezuela chapter, Transparencia Venezuela, offers consultation and services to victims of corruption. Transparencia Venezuela’s contact information is:
Avenida Andres Eloy Blanco
Edificio Camara de Comercio de Caracas
Piso 2
Oficina 2-15
Los Caobos
Caracas 1050
58-0212-576-0863
58-0212-573-3134
comunicaciones@transparencia.org.ve
10. Political and Security Environment
Increased discontent over the political and economic management of the country by the current administration have led to anti-government protests in cities across the country, some of which have turned violent. Increased scarcity of basic foods and medicines, regular failures of public services such as electricity and water, and shortages of gasoline and natural gas, have also led to frequent protests. In response, the government agency Superintendent of Fair Prices (SUNDDE) has at times taken action against private businesses it accuses of price gouging or other unfair practices by confiscating merchandise or forcing businesses to cut prices. Looting of stores has resulted after similar actions from SUNDDE in the past, including as recently as January 2018.
11. Labor Policies and Practices
Several factors make human resources a challenge for domestic and foreign investors alike: heavily regulated labor markets; talent flight, as skilled Venezuelans have sought employment abroad due to physical insecurity and political and economic uncertainty; government programs that support poorer Venezuelans making it more difficult for companies to attract unskilled labor; and declining traditional trade unions, as the GBRV has supported the establishment of “parallel” unions aligned to government interests and new “workers militias” to monitor the activities of union members. Roughly 10 percent of the total workforce is unionized. The GBRV extended in December 2015 for three more years a firing freeze in place since 2002 that shields most private-sector workers from termination, including for cause. Venezuelan labor law explicitly forbids employers from using contractors in place of direct employees, since May 2015, labeling the practice as fraudulent.
In April 2012, former President Chavez used a presidential decree to pass a long-pending Organic Law of Labor and Workers. The law replaced a 1997 labor law, expanding workers’ rights and benefits. The law prohibits employer discrimination on the basis of race, sex, age, civil status, religion, political beliefs, social class, nationality, sexual orientation, union membership, criminal record, or disability. The law prohibits termination without legal justification and requires employers to consult labor courts regarding the lawfulness of a termination. The law also prohibits employers from hiring third-party contractors to perform ongoing, regular duties as a means of avoiding legal obligations owed to those on one’s payroll. The law guarantees a retirement pension for workers in both the formal and informal sectors.
The 2012 law reduced the legal workweek from 44 to 40 hours and guaranteed workers 15 days of vacation, plus one day for each additional year of employment, up to a total of 30 days per year. The law also introduced new rights for female workers with children, including: 26 weeks of paid maternity leave for mothers (six pre- and 20 post-natal); two breaks per day for mothers who are breastfeeding; and access to a lactation room, if they work for an employer with more than 20 employees. The law created guidelines for temporary workers, who can work 10-hours daily with a labor inspector’s permission; shift workers may not work more than 42 hours per week, on average, over any eight-week period. The GBRV promulgated regulations implementing the new labor law in May 2013.
In 2017, Venezuela saw continued protests and work stoppages by unions across the public and private sectors, although no official statistics are available. The GBRV has delayed negotiations over collective bargaining agreements for workers in the public sector, leaving more than two million public employees without collective contracts, including teachers and electrical workers. No figures from 2017 were available, but protests and work stoppages continued due to a variety of economic, social, and political concerns.
In 2017, union leaders reported PDVSA lost 25,000 workers due to the company’s deteriorating economic performance and safety practices. In 2018, workers continued leaving, citing discontent with new executive leadership, who lacked experience in oil company operations. Workers reported management replaced standard daily safety meetings with political propaganda meetings, urging compliance with PSUV political ideology.
In March 2018, The International Labor Organization (ILO) Governing Body approved the establishment of a Commission of Inquiry (CoI) on Venezuela. ILO members voted in favor of implementing a CoI, citing grave concern over the Venezuelan government’s lack of progress in implementing ILO recommendations and exhortations to comply with international labor and business standards. Venezuelan business and labor organizations welcomed the CoI’s establishment, noting it was long overdue after experiencing years of government impediments to improving business owners’ and workers’ rights.
The GBRV’s statistics agency (INE) estimated the unemployment rate at 7.3 percent in 2016. In 2015, the INE estimated 41 percent of the employed worked in the informal sector and 59 percent in the formal sector. No official numbers have been released since the end of 2016.
12. OPIC and Other Investment Insurance Programs
Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) programs in Venezuela were suspended in 2005, due to Venezuela's failure to cooperate in suppressing international narcotics trafficking. In 2014, the United States determined that Venezuela failed to make sufficient or meaningful efforts to adhere to its obligations under international counter-narcotics agreements and conventions. However, President Obama issued a national interest waiver, determining that support for programs to aid Venezuela is vital to the national interest of the United States. Under this waiver, Venezuela is eligible for OPIC programs starting in 2015, but OPIC is not currently open for business in Venezuela.
The U.S. Export-Import Bank (ExIm Bank) has not provided new financing for projects in Venezuela since April 2003. Both OPIC and the Ex-Im Bank still retain significant exposure in Venezuela prior to suspending operations.
13. Foreign Direct Investment and Foreign Portfolio Investment Statistics
Table 2: Key Macroeconomic Data, U.S. FDI in Host Country/Economy
| Host Country Statistical Source | USG or International Statistical Source | USG or International Source of Data: | ||
Economic Data | Year | Amount | Year | Amount |
|
Host Country Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ($M USD) | 2013 | $371,006 | 2014 | $482,359 | |
Foreign Direct Investment | Host Country Statistical Source | USG or International Statistical Source | USG or International Source of Data: | ||
U.S. FDI in Partner Country ($M USD, stock positions) | 2015 | $9,568 | 2016 | $7,984 | BEA data available at http://bea.gov/international/direct_ |
Host Country’s FDI in the United States ($M USD, stock positions) | 2015 | $4,187 | 2016 | $4,457 | BEA data available at http://bea.gov/international/direct_ |
Total Inbound Stock of FDI as % host GDP | 2013 | 10.4% | 2014 | 6.7% |
Table 3: Sources and Destination of FDITable 4: Sources of Portfolio Investment
Direct Investment from/in Counterpart Economy Data | ||||
From Top Five Sources/To Top Five Destinations (US Dollars, Millions) | ||||
Inward Direct Investment 2016 | Outward Direct Investment 2016 | |||
Total Inward | 22,873 | 100% | Total Outward | N/A |
United States | 4,379 | 19 | N/A | |
Netherlands | 3,209 | 14% |
| |
Spain | 2,034 | 9% |
| |
France | 1,909 | 8% |
| |
Brazil | 1,506 | 7% |
| |
"0" reflects amounts rounded to +/- USD 500,000. |
Table 4: Sources of Portfolio Investment
Portfolio Investment Assets – June 2017 | ||||||||
Top Five Partners (Millions, US Dollars) | ||||||||
Total | Equity Securities | Total Debt Securities | ||||||
All Countries | 3,418 | 100% | All Countries | 29 | 100% | All Countries | 3,389 | 100% |
United States | 2,831 | 83% | Panama | 16 | 55% | United States | 2,819 | 83% |
Switzerland | 264 | 8% | United States | 12 | 41% | Switzerland | 264 | 8% |
Denmark | 120 | 4% | Not Specified | 1 | <1% | Denmark | 120 | 4% |
Panama | 17 | <1% | N/A | N/A | N/A | Panama | 1 | <1% |
Not specified | 183 | 5% | N/A | N/A | N/A | Not Specified | 182 | 5% |