January 16th, 2010
Venezuela is in serious economic trouble. Production of oil – the backbone of the economy – dropped by 400,000 barrels/day last year due to reduced demand. “Indefinite” four-hour-per-week rolling blackouts have begun in big cities as hydroelectric dams have been hit hard by a drought. And then last week, Hugo Chávez announced last Friday he will devalue the country’s currency, the bolivar, for the first time since it was introduced in 2003.
The Venezuelan people are (rightly) afraid that even more serious inflation will set in. Many rushed out last week after the announcement to buy electronics and other durable goods that would hold their value. Merchants raise their prices as a result – the exact opposite effect a currency devaluation should have.
Chávez is not amused. “‘There is no reason for anybody to be raising prices,’ Chávez said Sunday on his national television show. He explained to listeners that the ‘bourgeois’ in Caracas society would plan price increases but that they would fail. ‘People, do not let them rob you,’ he said. ‘Denounce it,’” the Washington Post reported.
But if that approach doesn’t inspire a lot of confidence in the country’s stability, consider this idea:
A shipment of Chinese home appliances will be sold cheaply in Venezuelan government stores to stop speculation by retailers after the country’s currency was devalued last week, President Hugo Chavez said Wednesday.
“A boat is coming from China. It brings refrigerators, television sets and washing machines we’ll be selling at low prices, as we already do with food products in the Mercal chain,” Chavez said of the government-owned supermarkets opened in 2003.
A single appliance-laded boat from China? Well, that should do the trick for country of 28 million people.
Tags: bolivar, cheap Chinese goods, devaluation, Hugo Chavez
Posted in Business & Trade, China, Venezuela | 1 Comment »
January 7th, 2010
I was reading about the weird and intriguing (and for purposes of this blog, not so relevant) theory of geological hot spots in Al Gore’s great climate change primer Our Choice, and it got me thinking. The (still unproven) idea is that areas of the earth’s surface that are unusually hot, such as Old Faithful at Yellowstone National Park in the US, can be explained by large asteroid strikes in the ocean at the corresponding place exactly on the opposite side of the world. This point, 180 degrees away, is called an antipode.
This made me remember growing up in the US and occasionally hearing grownups say “if you dig a hole straight through the earth to the other side, you’d be in China.” This, I can confirm with this nifty Antipode Map, is not the case. America’s whole collective anitpode is out in the south Indian Ocean (exception: Hawaii – you’re in Botswana!)
But it turns out that China and Latin America have some serious antipodean matching going on. John at the great Sinosplice blog apparently figured this out three years ago:
So you can see that China mostly just overlaps with Argentina, and most countries don’t overlap with any land at all. According to another website, China gets these exciting antipodes match-ups:
- Beijing – Bahia Blanca, Argentina
- Taipei – Asuncion, Paraguay
- Shanghai – Buenos Aires, Argentina
- Wuhan – Cordoba, Argentina
- Xi’an – Santiago, Chile
Some of them are give-or-take a few hundred kilometers according to the map but still cool approximations to know.
Back in October, I posted a snippet of a Shanghai Daily article relating to Chile’s pavilion preparation for this year’s Shanghai Expo:
At the Shanghai event next year, Chile will attract visitors with three special wells. People will be able to look into the wells in the pavilion in Shanghai to see scenes and hear the sounds of some Chilean cities on the opposite side of the earth.
It still sounds hokey, but I guess now more credible than the “digging a hole to China” silliness I thought of when I first heard about it – even if those scenes and sounds are technically coming from Argentina.
Image: Sinosplice
Tags: antipodes, digging a hole to China, Shanghai Expo, Sinosplice
Posted in Argentina, Chile, China, Latin America, Uncategorized | 2 Comments »