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VENEZUELA
Venezuela's location on the Caribbean coast
makes the flight there one of the shortest – and
often cheapest – from most parts of Europe and
the US. Not that hordes of foreign visitors tend
to take advantage of that. Despite packing nearly
every natural environment on the continent into
a relatively small place – Caribbean beaches,
snowcapped mountains, wildlife-rich wetlands,
desert, Amazonian jungle, fertile river valley
– the country has historically been one of the
least-visited in South America; even war-torn
Colombia receives five times more tourists annually
than Venezuela.
In any case, as the world's fourth largest oil
producer, Venezuela has not had a pressing need
for additional sources of revenue, and the country
has done very little to promote itself abroad.
Moreover, until recently its oil wealth translated
into extremely high prices, making dining and
accommodation rather expensive in comparison with
the rest of South America. However, changes may
be on the horizon.
President Hugo Chávez has looked to increase development,
and falling oil prices have led to a severe currency
devaluation in the past several years, making
travel within Venezuela considerably less expensive
than before. And much is in place already: an
extensive highway system makes internal travel
easy, while a countrywide guesthouse network provides
ample accommodation options.
Ironically, many tourists now avoid Venezuela
because of the political instability that has
accompanied Chávez's rise to power, overthrow
and return to power. Although most of the country
is safe except for Caracas, international headlines
have served as a powerful deterrent to would-be
visitors.
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