Concerts and catwalks return to Venezuela, but only for those with cash
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[June 13, 2022]
By Vivian Sequera and Mayela Armas
CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuelan pop and
reggaeton fans able to pay the equivalent of the country's monthly
minimum wage for a concert ticket are filling venues for the first time
in over seven years to see their favorite national and international
artists.
A partial easing of economic woes in the country, which remains marked
by extreme inequalities, has encouraged the return of music events in
Caracas and other cities.
Since March, singers such as the Dominican Republic's Natti Natasha, the
Colombian band Morat and vocal group Il Divo have performed in venues
around the country.
"Many artists decided not to come to Venezuela (for years)," said Felix
Colmenares, an event producer, noting many of his peers left the country
amid an ongoing exodus which has seen six million Venezuelans migrate
since 2015.
The events, mostly accommodating just a few thousand spectators, have
tended to sell out, including an urban music festival that took place
earlier this month in the parking lot of a Caracas shopping center.
The thriving concert scene is one of several recent signs of a
superficial improvement in Venezuela's economy since the relaxation of
currency controls in 2019 and broader adoption of the U.S. dollar,
allowing the emergence of more high-end restaurants, cafes and even
casinos, which were legalized in 2020.
A local fashion week even resumed at the end of April inside a luxury
hotel in Valencia, the capital of the central state of Carabobo,
showcasing 27 homegrown designers' creations - from gala to casual wear
in an effort to revive the country's struggling textile industry.
Two sources from the textile and footwear sector said they are reckoning
with a series of tax hikes and tight credit, although dollarization
"helps."
"People and concert promoters have given themselves the opportunity to
bring joy, to change the reality a bit," said Fabian Garcia, a
hospitality student who traveled to the capital to attend the festival
at the shopping center.
But "in Venezuela we find contrasting realities (...) Caracas is a
bubble," added the 18-year-old. In his western Venezuelan hometown of
Merida, he said he suffers from frequent power and water outages as well
as gasoline shortages.
The country is still struggling with low industrial production,
deteriorating transportation services and a healthcare crisis, according
to economists.
Inequality has worsened, with the income of the
richest fifth of the population increasing last year to 46 times that of
the poorest fifth, doubling the gap recorded in 2020, according to
calculations by the local firm Anova Policy. It also noted a lumpy
recovery in consumption across different segments of the population.
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People attend an urban music festival housed in the open parking lot
of a shopping center in Caracas, Venezuela June 4, 2022. Picture
taken June 4, 2022. REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria
Given concert tickets cost from around $30 - roughly equivalent to
the country's monthly minimum wage - up to $500, access is still
limited to a tiny minority, with inflation and dollarization
accentuating wage gaps.
"One sees these pockets of exuberance in some sectors while
elsewhere there are signs of devastating precariousness," said
economist Leonardo Vera, who added that while the flow of oil
revenue is increasing amid near record global prices, it is still
far from the boom of a decade ago.
"Venezuela is still very weak and we can't talk about a recovery
yet," Vera said, noting the poor state of services and
infrastructure.
Nearly two-thirds of households report a deterioration in
electricity and water supplies, according to local observatory
group, and companies are operating at 28% capacity, according to
industry group Conindustria.
The public health sector is perhaps where the situation is most
stark. In May, Reuters visited a hospital in the southwest of
Caracas, where patients were lying on the floor waiting to be seen
and at least four of its nine floors were closed.
Car dealerships, which were closed as companies including General
Motors and Ford shuttered or scaled back local production, now house
imported SUVs. Purchases of cars and trucks abroad increased 30% in
the first quarter of 2022 versus the same period a year earlier,
according to industry estimates.
Omar Zambrano, an economist and Anova's director, said the
egalitarian dream of Venezuela's late socialist leader Hugo Chavez
has yielded to an "super-savage market economy" where it is "every
man for himself."
At the urban music festival in Caracas, many concert-goers appeared
to be skipping more costly trappings, with most opting for $2 beers
rather than $60 bottles of vodka that black tied-clad waiters served
in the VIP area.
"This is for people who really can manage it, for whom it's not so
hard to pull together a little more money," said Camila Oliveros, a
19-year-old nursing student. "Not everyone can make it because many
people work, work, work and every bit they make is just to eat."
(Reporting by Vivian Sequera, Mayela Armas in Caracas and Tibisay
Romero, in Valencia, Venezuela; Writing by Isabel Woodford; Editing
by Christian Plumb, Julia Symmes Cobb and Daniel Wallis)
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