Oil supplies are dwindling and prices still rising, so it's only natural that governments want more and more and more control over their resources up to full nationalization. They do offer monetary compensation for nationalization, it's just that some, like Exxon, are not satisfied with the deal. Well, I never said they should be. I just wondered how the hell can you call the nationalization procedure a criminal act.Guardsman Bass wrote:It's enough for Chavez to fund all of his neat patronage projects.
So Venezuela was forced to enter deals with foreign oil magnates under immense economic pressure (just like Russia, and many other oil producing nations), but now as oil is getting more expensive and the economies in those countries become stronger, they decide it's time to see back to those contracts. Just like Russia reasserted control over it's own resource extraction industry (at the very least). Can't blame them, sorry.Guardsman Bass wrote:The lower royalties were during a period in which the market value of the oil was incredibly low
In what way a rich guy buying a poor man's house during economic turmoil and forcing the poor guy to live, say, in his garage for a rent, is really superior to same rich guy acting as a mobster and throwing that man out into the garage by force? Just because it's a milder "economic policy" than just outright kicking his ass and taking all of his natural resources (as it happened in case of Iraq), then setting the right of foreign nations and corporations to rule those resources and their trade?
What if the man in the garage suddenly decides to take his flat back? Of course the rich guy would resist! Moreover, the rich guy would see that poor guy as a threat, too - since the other guy is no longer that poor and can actually act in his own interest.