

Venezuela has been in the news a lot lately, but the headlines ignore the real story. Venezuela squandered the richest oil endowment on earth, taking it from petrostate prosperity to economic disaster by adopting Socialism. In my other articles here, you have probably already read some that discuss the folly of Socialism—Venezuela screams the horror that Socialism brings. For most of the twentieth century, Venezuela stood as South America’s economic outlier—a nation whose oil wealth gave it a standard of living that rivaled parts of Europe. Caracas was a cosmopolitan capital, flush with petrodollars, modern infrastructure, and a growing middle class. By the 1970s, Venezuela was the richest country in Latin America, and a political class that promised prosperity without limits. Today, Venezuela ranks as the poorest economy in South America. Its currency is worthless, its infrastructure is failing, and millions have emigrated. The root cause is not resource depletion but the impact of Socialist policies. Despite holding 303 billion barrels of oil reserves—the planet's largest—Venezuela now produces less than 1% of the world's oil, far below its late 1990s peak. How does a nation with the world’s largest oil reserves become an economic disaster? The answer is a layered story of political hubris, institutional decay, and the corrosive effects of treating oil as a political patronage machine rather than a business. Corruption led to public outcry and eventually to the election of a Socialist government that made the problems even worse. After Venezuela’s discovery of massive oil reserves, Venezuela brought in foreign companies to operate the fields, bringing technical expertise and investment. By the mid-20th century, oil revenues funded highways, universities, and a welfare state that promised cradle-to-grave support. The state became the primary distributor of wealth, and political power became inseparable from control of oil revenues. When oil prices soared, Venezuela boomed. When they fell, the country lurched into crisis. The government’s fascist attempts to manage the economy failed miserably. The first major structural break came in 1976, when Venezuela nationalized its oil industry, folding foreign operations into the state-owned company PDVSA. At first, the move seemed successful. PDVSA was run by competent technocrats, production remained strong, and the country continued to enjoy high living standards. But once the government controlled the industry, the temptation to treat it as a political slush fund became irresistible. The election of Hugo Chávez in 1998 marked the beginning of Venezuela’s most dramatic transformation. Chávez promised a “Bolivarian Revolution” that would uplift the poor, redistribute wealth, and break the power of entrenched elites. His early programs—road building, housing construction, mass vaccination—were framed as antipoverty initiatives. But these programs were financed almost entirely by oil revenues, not by sustainable economic growth. When oil prices were high, the government expanded social spending, subsidies, and state employment. When prices fell, the system became unsustainable. The turning point came four years later, when a strike at PDVSA challenged Chávez’s authority. In response, the government fired 18,000 workers, including many of the country’s most experienced engineers and managers—roughly 40% of the company’s workforce. These were the people who understood how to extract Venezuela’s notoriously heavy crude, which is closer to asphalt than conventional oil and requires specialized expertise and equipment. Their replacements were chosen not for competence but for political loyalty. PDVSA became an oil company in name only, and competing oil companies that could have done it better were not allowed. Many believe Venezuela failed only due to mismanagement. However, the deeper problem was structural: oil revenue served as a substitute for authentic economic development. This encouraged the postponing of tough choices, ongoing political loyalty purchases, and neglect of diversification. When the technical, political, and economic foundations of the oil industry collapsed, there was nothing underneath. If Venezuela is able to recover politically, what next? How can the same missteps be avoided, and what should Venezuela’s leaders do instead? Alaska provides a successful model for managing oil wealth without government interference in oil production. Alaska offers Venezuela a powerful contrast: both sit on enormous oil reserves, but only one has turned that wealth into a long-term public benefit. Alaska’s model isn’t perfect, but its core principles—fiscal discipline, transparent governance, and converting oil revenue into diversified, citizen-owned wealth—illustrate exactly what Venezuela failed to do. How Alaska’s Oil Model Could Guide Venezuela Toward Stability and Prosperity First, by creating a clear, rules-based fiscal framework. Alaska treats oil revenue for what it is, a volatile, exhaustible resource, and builds its budget around that reality. Some of its key features include: Production taxes and royalties are governed by transparent statutes, not ad hoc political decrees. Stabilization mechanisms that prevent sudden spending spikes when oil prices rise. Predictable terms for investors, which encourage long-term capital commitments. Why this matters for Venezuela: Venezuela’s fiscal system turned into a political weapon. Constant changes to taxes, royalties, and contracts discouraged investment and fostered corruption, worsening the situation under Socialist rule. Adopting a rules-based system like Alaska's would lower uncertainty, stimulate investment, and limit political interference. Second, the Alaska Permanent Fund builds intergenerational wealth by creating a sovereign wealth fund seeded with oil revenue and invested globally. It operates on core principles: Oil money is saved, not spent, except for a capped annual draw. Earnings, not the principal, fund public services and citizen dividends. Independent management is insulated from political interference. Why this matters for Venezuela: Venezuela spent nearly all its oil revenue, using PDVSA as a political tool. The result: no savings, no cushion against price crashes, no capital for reinvestment, and a collapsing national oil company. A Venezuelan equivalent of the APF—properly insulated from politics—could rebuild national wealth, stabilize budgets, and restore public trust. Third, it is essential to separate the state from the oil companies. In the Alaska model: Oil companies operate independently. The state regulates, taxes, and audits them—but does not run them. PDVSA-style political purges are impossible because the state doesn’t manage production. Why this matters for Venezuela: PDVSA became a political instrument. Alaska’s model shows the value of professional, depoliticized operations, competitive bidding, transparent oversight, and independent regulators. This separation is essential for restoring efficiency and attracting foreign partners. Fourth, is to use oil to support society, not replace the economy. Alaska uses oil revenue to: Fund public services Provide annual dividends Support infrastructure Reduce taxes on residents But crucially, Alaska does not pretend oil can fund everything forever. The Permanent Fund’s structure forces diversification. Why this matters for Venezuela: Venezuela became almost entirely dependent on oil, leading to the collapse of agriculture, manufacturing, and services. Alaska’s approach demonstrates that oil or any natural resourse should be a bridge, not the whole economy. Savings and investment can support diversification, and citizens can benefit directly without destroying the productive base. Fifth, the system must include transparency and public accountability. Alaska’s oil revenue is: Publicly reported Audited Debated openly Managed through institutions with clear mandates Why this matters for Venezuela: Corruption hollowed out Venezuela’s oil sector. Alaska’s transparency mechanisms—public reporting, independent audits, and legal constraints—offer a blueprint for rebuilding legitimacy. I would add something Alaska has not explored: buying stock in oil companies that extract oil. The government could buy stock as part of the overall plan and place it in a separate fund essentially owned by the population. Dividends from this holding could be distributed equally to the citizens. In this way, there would be no concern about foreign oil companies taking Venezuela’s wealth. The people would be stockholders in those companies and share equally in the profits. Alaska and Venezuela both sit atop vast oil reserves, but Alaska treated oil as a temporary windfall to be converted into permanent wealth, while Venezuela treated it as an endless political slush fund. Alaska’s Permanent Fund, transparent tax system, and depoliticized energy sector offer a roadmap for how Venezuela could rebuild its economy: save rather than spend, regulate rather than control, and invest for the future rather than burn through the present. Venezuela’s fall from the richest to the poorest nation in South America is not a mystery. It resulted from a political system—first fascist, then Socialist—that used oil as a political tool at the expense of true economic development. Vast oil reserves enabled the avoidance of building a stable, diverse economy. Today, Venezuela stands as a warning to every nation that believes natural resources guarantee prosperity. Wealth extracted from the ground is not the same as wealth created by people. Without strong institutions, competent governance, and a commitment to reinvestment, even the richest endowments can become pathways to ruin. Venezuela’s oil still sits beneath its soil—billions of barrels of it. But until the country rebuilds the institutions above the ground, that oil will remain what it has become: a symbol of lost potential. That can only occur by rejecting Socialist central planning and by embracing free-market capitalism, and letting capitalism do what it does best: lift people out of poverty.
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