Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

Venezuela has bigger oil reserves than Saudi Arabia — yet there’s no toilet paper in stores

This is a line of people, up at dawn, to get into a supermarket and get basic foodstuffs before they run out.
This is a line of people, up at dawn, to get into a supermarket and get basic foodstuffs before they run out.
This is a line of people, up at dawn, to get into a supermarket and get basic foodstuffs before they run out.
John Moore/Getty Images
Zack Beauchamp
Zack Beauchamp is a senior correspondent at Vox, where he covers ideology and challenges to democracy, both at home and abroad. His book on democracy, The Reactionary Spirit, was published 0n July 16. You can purchase it here.

Venezuela is holding legislative elections this Sunday. The stakes are high, particularly given the dire state of the economy — a point that this quote, from a stunning feature by the Financial Times’s Andres Schipani, illustrates:

Three decades ago, Venezuela boasted some of Latin America’s highest living standards. Today, after 17 years of revolution, most people cannot find toilet paper in shops — even though the country has larger oil reserves than Saudi Arabia.

Of course, being able to find toilet paper and other goods in stores isn’t a full measure of quality of life. But the problems in Venezuela go far beyond shortages:

  • A 2014 UN report found that Venezuela had the second-highest murder rate in the world. According to the UN, it’s “the only country in South America that has had a consistently increasing homicide rate since 1995.”
  • According to International Monetary Fund projections, GDP is likely to shrink by 10 percent in 2015, the most severe contraction anywhere on the planet (except maybe Syria).
  • Venezuela ranks very last on the World Justice Project’s rule of law index — below, as Schipani points out archly, Afghanistan.
  • The IMF estimates inflation at 159 percent. That’s hard to know for sure, because of how the government sets official exchange rate to the dollar. But this chart by Johns Hopkins’s Steven Hanke — which shows the official exchange rate to the dollar and an estimated black market rate — tells a pretty stunning story:

Why all of these problems at once? There’s a confluence of reasons: a global fall in the price of oil, President Nicolás Maduro’s stubborn refusal to reform Venezuela’s ridiculous currency pricing system, corruption in the criminal justice system, and incompetence in the public sector economy. These deep, fundamental problems are doing tremendous damage to Venezuelan society.

As Venezuelan writer Francisco Toro put it in the New Republic last year: “The shit is hitting the fan, and there’s no toilet paper.”

Policy
Is Trump’s Justice Department trying to discredit itself?Is Trump’s Justice Department trying to discredit itself?
Policy

The DOJ used to avoid spectacles like the Louise Lucas raid.

By Ian Millhiser
Politics
What the Supreme Court still has left to decide this termWhat the Supreme Court still has left to decide this term
Politics

Democracy and Donald Trump dominate the Court’s remaining docket.

By Ian Millhiser
Politics
The Supreme Court seems a bit nervous about letting the police track you with your phoneThe Supreme Court seems a bit nervous about letting the police track you with your phone
Politics

The justices were concerned that the Trump administration is asking for too much in a major police surveillance case.

By Ian Millhiser
Politics
The Supreme Court will decide when the police can use your phone to track youThe Supreme Court will decide when the police can use your phone to track you
Politics

Chatrie v. United States asks what limits the Constitution places on the surveillance state in an age of cellphones.

By Ian Millhiser
Policy
Pam Bondi’s ouster makes Trump’s Justice Department even more dangerousPam Bondi’s ouster makes Trump’s Justice Department even more dangerous
Policy

The best thing about Bondi was her incompetence.

By Ian Millhiser
Culture
Me Too revealed a lot of villains. Why is Epstein the one we still care about?Me Too revealed a lot of villains. Why is Epstein the one we still care about?
Culture

How the Epstein story became an American parable.

By Constance Grady