Venezuelan banking crisis of 1994
The 1994 banking crisis occurred in Venezuela when a number of the banks of Venezuela were taken over by the government. The first to fail, in January 1994, was Banco Latino, the country's second-largest bank ($1.3 billion bailout[1]). Later, two banks accounting for 18% of total deposits (Banco Consolidado and Banco de Venezuela) also failed.[2] The crisis led the President Rafael Caldera to suspend constitutional rights in order to impose price controls, exposure of deep corruption in the Venezuelan banking system, and the resignation of Finance Minister Julio Sosa Rodriguez.[3][4][5]
History
[edit]The Venezuelan government spent $5 billion from January to June 1994 to try to rescue 8 banks, which were all declared bankrupt in June 1994. State officials suggested that most of the public funds for recovery had been stolen by bankers fleeing the country's crisis. At this point, reserves at the Central Bank dropped from $12 billion to $8 billion.[1]
On 9 August 1994, Banco de Venezuela became the tenth bank bailed out by the Venezuelan government during the crisis, with the government taking a majority stake for an estimated at US$294m.[6] In total, between January 1994 and August 1995 17 of the country's 49 commercial banks, as well as some subsidiaries, failed - representing 53% of the system assets.[7] Estimates of the total cost of the bailout range from 18 to 31% of GDP;[8] one estimate gives the total cost of the bank bailouts as 1.8 trillion Bolivars, or $12bn.[2]
Economic liberalization in the early 1990s and lax banking supervision had laid the seeds for the crisis, which was then triggered by the cumulative effects of a collapse in the oil price, which led to sharply reduced government spending and weakened the Venezuelan economy.[2]
Ruth de Krivoy, who was President of the Central Bank of Venezuela at the height of the crisis in 1994, later published a book on the episode.[9]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Escobar, Gabriel (1994-06-27). "VENEZUELAN ECONOMY IN CRISIS". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2023-03-16.
- ^ a b c Molano, 1997. Financial reverberations: the Latin American banking system during the mid-1990s. SBC Warburg Working Paper, Social Science Research Network (1997).
- ^ Brooke, James (1994-05-16). "Failure of High-Flying Banks Shakes Venezuelan Economy". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-08-14.
- ^ "VENEZUELAN ECONOMY IN CRISIS". Washington Post. 2024-01-05. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2024-08-14.
- ^ "Venezuelan Finance Minister resigns - UPI Archives". UPI. 1995-02-06.
- ^ "Veneuela (sic) Announces Bank Rescue Package". New York Times. August 10, 1994. Retrieved 2009-01-13.
- ^ Molina, C.A. (2002), "Predicting bank failures using a hazard model: the Venezuelan banking crisis", Emerging Markets Review, Volume 3, Issue 1, 1 March 2002, Pages 31-50
- ^ Maxfield, Sylvia (2003), "When do voters matter more than cronies in developing countries? The politics of bank crisis resolution", in Critical issues in international financial reform (R. Albert Berry, Gustavo Indart, eds.), Transaction Publishers, p272
- ^ Da Costa, Mercedes (2001), Collapse: The Venezuelan Banking Crisis of '94, Finance & Development, 1 March 2001
Further reading
[edit]- de Krivoy, Ruth (2000). Collapse: The Venezuelan banking crisis of 1994. Group of Thirty. ISBN 978-1-56708-113-8.