“La sabiduría de la vida consiste en la eliminación de lo no esencial. En reducir los problemas de la filosofía a unos pocos solamente: el goce del hogar, de la vida, de la naturaleza, de la cultura”.
Lin Yutang
Cervantes
Hoy es el día más hermoso de nuestra vida, querido Sancho; los obstáculos más grandes, nuestras propias indecisiones; nuestro enemigo más fuerte, el miedo al poderoso y a nosotros mismos; la cosa más fácil, equivocarnos; la más destructiva, la mentira y el egoísmo; la peor derrota, el desaliento; los defectos más peligrosos, la soberbia y el rencor; las sensaciones más gratas, la buena conciencia, el esfuerzo para ser mejores sin ser perfectos, y sobretodo, la disposición para hacer el bien y combatir la injusticia dondequiera que esté.
MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Don Quijote de la Mancha.
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7 de septiembre de 2015
This Brazilian Beef Company Has a $2 Billion Stake in Venezuela's Future
In June, the president of Venezuela’s congress, Diosdado Cabello, spent
four days in Brazil. It wasn’t a secret. He was accompanied by other
officials, tweeted that he was “working for the homeland” and met with the president. But it was an unusual state visit.
His first major meeting was with Joesley Batista, the eldest of a
billionaire clan of five siblings who control JBS SA, the world’s
largest meat packer. On three days, Cabello went to JBS plants. He dined
with the Batista family.
If spending so much time with a foreign meat producer seems
surprising, it tells a great deal about the co-dependent relationship
emerging between one Brazilian company and the government of Venezuela.
And it is a lesson in the Venezuelan government’s priorities these days.
December elections are looming as hyperinflation, falling production
and rising crime have led to food rationing, riots and looting.
“The government’s main worry now is food supply,” Fernando Portela,
executive director of the Venezuelan-Brazilian Trade Chamber, or Cavenbra, said. “They need to keep supplying shops to stay in power.”
Only one in five voters say
they want President Nicolas Maduro to serve out his term ending in
2019. The ruling party could lose control of congress for the first time
in 16 years.
Cabello described his trip to Brazil as negotiating food and medicine
to win the “economic war” capitalists are waging against his country.
Requests to the Information Ministry for further comment from Cabello,
the Food Ministry and the president’s office went unanswered.
Special Arrangements
For JBS, the Venezuelan market now has
special significance. It has a $2.1 billion contract and provides almost
half the meat and a quarter of the chicken eaten by 28 million
carnivorous Venezuelans. The country accounts for about 10 percent of
JBS’s export revenues, which some analysts have labeled a risky
position, given Venezuela’s near default status. JBS doesn’t see it that
way.
“For JBS, it was an opportunity to do something nobody else did in a
country which has an important demand potential,” Miguel Gularte,
president of JBS Mercosul, said in an interview. By taking over the
packaging and distribution of its products in Venezuela, JBS also has
been able to sharply reduce the time it takes to get to store shelves.
JBS has an arrangement other companies do not. In 2014 it sold $1.2
billion of food to the Venezuelan government and was paid within 90
days, according to documents prepared jointly by the company and the
state import monopoly Corpovex.
Unpaid Invoices
By contrast, numerous local and foreign
corporations in Venezuela haven’t been able to obtain rationed dollars
from the government in years. Ecoanalitica, a Caracas-based consultancy,
notes that the Venezuelan government has $28 billion of unpaid invoices
to private companies.
Gularte said JBS expected to expand sales to Venezuela by 20 percent
in 2015. The company is in talks with Credit Suisse AG to structure
financing for further growth there.
“For Venezuela, it’s an advantage to negotiate with a single
multi-protein company with an integrated logistic platform instead of
buy the chicken from one company, the beef from another,” Gularte said.
“Venezuela found a partner that respects it.”
Politics, both Brazilian and Venezuelan, lurk in the background. The
countries’ ruling parties have grown mutually supportive in the face of
crises, with Maduro defending Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff against
impeachment
calls as she criticized U.S. sanctions on his government. The JBS deal
provides a Brazilian lifeline to Maduro’s government as it endeavors to
stock food shelves in advance of elections.
Biggest Political Donor
Last year, JBS was the biggest donor
to Rousseff’s Workers’ Party. The company’s growing donations to
Rousseff, as well as her opponents, were cited in a congressional inquiry
of BNDES, the Brazilian state development bank, which owns a quarter of
the beef maker. There was, however, no state financing for JBS’s
Venezuelan deal and Gularte said the Brazilian government was not even
aware of it. JBS declined to comment on the BNDES inquiry.
The growing ties between JBS and the Venezuelan government are
noteworthy in a country where imports have plummeted due to a collapse
in oil, the country’s main revenue source, and where food companies have
been targeted.
In July, troops occupied warehouses of the largest local food producer,
Empresas Polar, after the government accused it of sabotaging the
economy by cutting output. The Caracas-based company says it’s owed $463
million by Venezuela’s currency regulators.
Credit Risk
JBS’s Brazilian competitors have also felt the
pain. Sao Paulo’s BRF SA and Marfrig Global Foods SA earlier this year
stopped shipping to Venezuela amid rising credit risk. Minerva SA said
it only exports to the country when paid in advance. Their withdrawal
from the Venezuelan market helped the Batistas’ share to skyrocket.
Hundreds
of people line up to buy government-subsidized meat, a product
difficult to find in Venezuela because of country-wide shortages.
Photographer: Meridith Kohut/Bloomberg
Every
10 days, a JBS-contracted Hamburg Sud liner pulls into Venezuela’s
biggest port, Puerto Cabello. On a recent August afternoon, Brazilian
soy flour was unloaded as the steamer San Alvaro neared the docks
bearing JBS’s meat.
Within two weeks of leaving Brazil, the white refrigerated meat
containers are unloaded and dispatched. The state-run Supply and
Agricultural Services Corp., or CASA, monitors each container daily.
Port officials say the subsidized food is channeled to state shops in
areas most threatened by riots or the opposition’s campaigning.
Colombian Border Shut
Recently, the Maduro government declared a state of emergency
near part of the Colombian border, saying the smuggling of goods
worsened shortages, a move critics consider scapegoating to divert
attention from failed policies.
Compared with the price and efficiency provided to JBS goods, other
foodstuff faces very different prospects. A private Venezuelan
slaughterhouse, for example, sells meat from a locally-reared cow to a
private supermarket for about 16 percent of the price of Brazilian meat,
according to Franz Rivas, executive director of the National
Meatpackers Association, or Asofrigo. And a container imported by a
private Venezuelan company may sit for weeks on a ship outside the port
and take up to two months to clear customs, according to Cavenbra and
the Puerto Cabello Chamber of Commerce.
The Venezuelan government’s land redistribution program -- part of
the socialists’ confrontation with the private sector -- has driven many
cattle ranchers out of business. It has reduced domestic beef
production from 60 percent of the market a decade ago to 20 percent,
according to the country’s meat council and the U.S. department of
agriculture.
Venezuela has gone in the past year from being the world’s
second-biggest cattle importer to bringing in almost none, according to
the USDA. Local slaughter has collapsed so much, Rivas said, that every
Asofrigo member now operates at a loss.