How Maduro has destroyed life inside Venezuela

The misrule, oppression and corruption of the illegitimate regime headed by Nicolás Maduro has caused widespread economic suffering and societal collapse in Venezuela.

The 2019–2020 National Survey of Living Conditions (ENCOVI, for Encuesta Nacional de Condiciones de Vida) — published by researchers at Andrés Bello Catholic University in Caracas — details how basic infrastructure, the labor market and education have deteriorated since 2014.

The United Nations estimates that 7 million Venezuelans — 25 percent of the population — are in need of humanitarian assistance, while an astonishing 96 percent of Venezuelans live in poverty, according to ENCOVI.

Daily water and electricity are increasingly unavailable, according to the report. Only 77 percent of the population has access to piped running water, and three-quarters of that group say they experience frequent service disruptions. News reports have featured scenes of people using open water in the street for bathing, cooking and drinking.

Two children swimming in filthy water (© Matias Delacroix/AP Images)
Children play in an open water main on a street in Caracas, Venezuela, July 28. (© Matias Delacroix/AP Images)

Thanks to regime-imposed government blackouts and the general degradation of electrical service across the country, 90 percent of Venezuelans do not have reliable access to electricity. Outside of Caracas in states like Zulia, Bolívar and Barinas, lights reportedly go out for days at a time.

ENCOVI’s survey data show the Maduro regime’s repression, corruption and economic mismanagement have driven 44 percent of Venezuela’s working adults into unemployment.

A closer look at that data shows the employment situation is even worse. The number of workers in the formal job sector — jobs with regular hours, wages and benefits — has dropped from 64 percent to 46 percent since 2015.

Many of those who remain in the formal job sector struggle with severe underemployment, where they cannot earn enough at their regular jobs to feed their families.

As a result, Venezuelans have had to find employment in the informal sector. These workers are not covered by health insurance and don’t have regular wages, leaving millions of Venezuelans struggling to provide for their families. This rise in the informal employment sector corresponds to the steep rise in poverty in the country.

Two people at barred window, child by room divider looking at electronic tablet (© Matias Delacroix/AP Images)
Isabel Quevedo, who used to sell children’s clothing, now sells snacks from inside her home in Caracas, Venezuela, August 23. (© Matias Delacroix/AP Images)

Children are no less affected than their parents. School enrollment across the country has dropped from 12.7 million children to 11 million. Only 60 percent of children regularly attend school.

When asked why they didn’t attend school consistently, children said it was because of the lack of food, water, electricity and transportation.

“ENCOVI’s results are the sad reflection of the reality of Venezuela’s people,” said Juan Guaidó, Venezuela’s legitimate interim president. “They are not isolated numbers, nor cold numbers, but the reflection of what we Venezuelans are suffering at this moment.”