ECONOMY

Venezuelan Hope Meets Empty Pipes and a Harder Post-Maduro Economy

In Sucre, residents queue for gas, water, and fuel amid promises of new oil revenues following Maduro’s fall. The BBC’s reporting reveals a broader Latin American reality: political transitions rapidly raise expectations, yet neglected regions experience slow recovery.

The Boom Perceived but Not Yet Realized

In the Venezuelan fishing town of Guaca, a woman remarked, “This is the first gas delivery since December,” highlighting the challenges posed by a broken economy. The BBC documented people gathering around rusty canisters, carrying them home under intense heat. Nearby, in Cumaná, residents endured two weeks without running water, resorting to collection from polluted streams. Petrol shortages forced vehicles to queue for miles in a country still dominated by oil wealth. These conditions are central, not peripheral, to the narrative of post-Maduro Venezuela.

There is a tendency, particularly among capitals and foreign ministries, to view regime change as a rapid shift from collapse to recovery. Since Nicolás Maduro’s removal on 3 January and the restoration of ties with the interim government led by Delcy Rodríguez, discussions of new foreign investment and oil agreements have circulated energetically. While this rhetoric signifies transition in Caracas, in Sucre, it remains distant and intangible.

This spatial and experiential distance is significant beyond Venezuela. The BBC’s original reporting and quotations vividly illustrate this dynamic. The report offers a cautionary message for Latin America: in countries afflicted by prolonged corruption, repression, underinvestment, currency devaluation, and institutional decay, the removal of a leader does not yield immediate recovery. Instead, it generates a tension between public expectations and infrastructural capacity, with infrastructure typically lagging behind.

Sucre, located hundreds of kilometers east of Caracas, is among Venezuela’s poorest states and remains disconnected from the capital’s discourse of deals and licenses. However, it embodies the central political question: will the financial resources following political transition reach ordinary citizens in towns such as Guaca, Cumaná, and Güiria, or will they bypass these communities, perpetuating shortages, migration, and the expansion of illicit economies?

This situation reflects a broader regional pattern. Latin America has repeatedly experienced similar cycles: following political upheaval, foreign capital reemerges, extractive industries reopen, and dormant contracts are revived. Former resource frontiers appear poised for growth. However, without state commitment and capacity for reinvestment, such booms become isolated enclaves, benefiting select sectors while communities reliant on labor and natural resources remain mired in prolonged neglect.

Guaca, Municipio Bermúdez, Venezuela. Playa Guaca Government

Oil Revenues Do Not Automatically Translate into Local Development

Significant natural resources exist off Sucre’s coast. Shell has long intended to develop the Dragon gas field located between Venezuela and Trinidad and Tobago. U.S. sanctions previously delayed this project; however, Maduro’s removal altered the situation. Shell obtained new licenses and, following a visit by U.S. Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum earlier this month, signed an agreement with the Venezuelan government to commence development. Shell asserts that the project will also benefit Venezuelans, a claim that may be partially valid. Nonetheless, caution is evident even in official statements.

Christopher Sabatini of Chatham House notes that while such projects may create employment and provide short-term financial inflows to local communities, they seldom foster comprehensive development on their own. His cautionary observation resonates across Latin America: companies extract resources using foreign equipment and personnel before exporting them. This characterization encapsulates decades of regional experience. The core issue is not extraction per se but extraction without subsequent economic transformation.

Sucre’s primary concern is not the arrival of funds but their distribution following historical patterns. Gas will be processed in Trinidad and Tobago for export, with revenues managed at the highest levels of government. International stakeholders will discuss stabilization and opportunity, yet in communities such as Guaca, fishermen continue to struggle with fuel costs and a depreciated currency. Pablo Marín articulates this disparity in the BBC report: in Ecuador, a family catching 100 kilograms of fish might earn 500 dollars, cover fuel expenses, and retain surplus income; in Guaca, families must repeatedly fish merely to break even.

This comparison extends beyond economics to psychological dimensions. Venezuelans, formerly among the region’s most prosperous, now perceive themselves as poorer than their counterparts performing similar work elsewhere in Latin America. This reversal alters the nature of migration, transforming it from the pursuit of opportunity to escape from humiliation and declining labor value. It also influences political dynamics: when education ceases to represent social mobility and students abandon university due to limited prospects, society experiences losses in both income and collective confidence.

Omar Zambrano, chief economist at Anova, cites evidence from the 1990s indicating reductions in poverty and improvements in education in regions receiving oil investments following industry liberalization. However, he emphasizes that Venezuela currently confronts the consequences of 25 years of institutional, productive, and social degradation. This context is critical. While Latin America frequently debates markets versus state control and national sovereignty versus foreign participation, these debates become secondary when the state’s foundational structures are weakened. Under such conditions, even resource windfalls fail to generate sustainable benefits.

Docks in the port of Cedros, Trinidad and Tobago. EFE/ Andrea de Silva

Poverty Persists Despite Delayed Reforms

Located three hours east of Guaca, accessible via potholed roads lacking mobile coverage and basic services, Güiria exemplifies how neglect becomes embedded in social structures. According to the BBC, nearly all residents know someone killed in U.S. strikes targeting suspected drug vessels in the Caribbean and Pacific. While U.S. officials label those aboard as “narco-terrorists,” locals attribute involvement in drug trafficking to poverty-driven necessity. A mother named Diannys acknowledges that individuals choose illicit paths out of necessity, without excusing their actions.

This insight holds significance throughout Latin America, revealing the connection between economic neglect and the expansion of illicit networks. Governments frequently address trafficking as solely a matter of criminal intent. However, in locations such as Güiria, evidence suggests a more complex reality: individuals skilled in fishing and agriculture, yet unable to earn sufficient income, become vulnerable to recruitment. As one brother of a deceased man stated, work “does not pay.” At this juncture, poverty transcends a social issue and becomes a conduit for security threats.

The case of Sucre illustrates that post-authoritarian optimism, post-crisis investment, and anti-trafficking policies are interdependent. If foreign capital benefits only export sectors and fails to reach local communities, migration will persist. Similarly, if neglected regions lack reliable access to water, fuel, infrastructure, and economic opportunities, trafficking will continue. Celebrating agreements without addressing everyday living conditions risks accelerating public disillusionment rather than fostering recovery.

Yurmari Martínez recalls Sucre two decades ago as a region with potential, characterized by numerous companies processing and exporting fish and industries fostering genuine competition. This recollection is significant as it challenges the notion that current poverty is natural or permanent. Instead, it is a product of policy decisions: fuel shortages, raw-material shortages, chronic underinvestment, and nationalizations have eroded the local economy. Consequently, policy and reinvestment must reverse these effects; no alternative exists.

This constitutes a sobering lesson for Venezuela and Latin America. Any post-Maduro economic boom will be evaluated not by oil contracts or diplomatic normalization but by tangible improvements: availability of cooking gas, access to water in Cumaná, the economic value of fishermen’s catches, and whether students in Sucre regain confidence that education leads to opportunity. Until such changes occur, the transition remains more rhetorical than experiential.

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