The BCV figures are beginning to be released, but their prolonged absence has generated “suspicions” among some economists.
By José Gregorio Yépez
Data from the Central Bank of Venezuela (BCV) indicate that the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of Venezuela’s public sector showed a negative performance in the first quarter of 2026, registering -0.68% .
This represents a significant decline compared to the fourth quarter of 2025, when it closed at 9% . The gap becomes even more pronounced when compared to the same period last year, when results were in positive territory at 10% .
Meanwhile, the private sector did not escape the impact in the first half of this year either. It showed a notable slowdown, recording growth of 3.52% , a total of 2.67 percentage points lower than the 6.19% of the previous quarter.
Most Affected Sectors
A review of BCV data shows that the construction sector experienced a significant drop of -18.30% . This contrasts with the 16.87% growth reported by the central bank for this sector at the end of 2025.
This decline has been linked to the negative performance of the oil sector, which as a whole recorded -2.12 % between January and March of this year.
Another sector showing a notable slowdown is mining, which grew 22.57% in the fourth quarter of 2025, while consolidated figures for the first half of 2026 show growth of only 1.86 % .
The political situation that emerged after January 3 impacted national economic performance. The only sector that showed strong growth was finance and insurance.
This sector grew 13.46% , more than seven percentage points higher than the previous quarter’s 5.85 % .
Figures and Doubts
To deepen the analysis of BCV data, we consulted economist Manuel Sutherland, who noted that the first relevant point is that “statistics that had been missing for many years are finally appearing, which suggests that the Central Bank, the National Institute of Statistics (INE), or the institutions handling economic data have the numbers but are not publishing them.”
The economist views the central bank’s figures with skepticism and states that “there is self-censorship and a willingness not to show the public what is happening.”
“An institution that should be independent and autonomous does not seem to be so. It gives the impression that, in some way, it is preventing or delaying the publication of results. This reduces credibility once the data is released, because it does not explain why it was not published on time,” Sutherland said.
He added that the results “are quite at odds with the reality perceived by people living in Venezuela.”
From a strictly technical analytical perspective, he clarified that “there is no GDP contraction, as people say, but rather a reduction in the growth rate.”
“It fell by 66%. It is one third of the previous increase, but not a decline per se. It is simply lower growth,” he insisted.
He explained that the decline in the oil sector is related to what happened on January 3 and subsequent changes, which he considers “normal.”
“The 0.68% drop in the public sector was also predictable. It was expected given the severity of sanctions and the practical blockade at the beginning of the year and end of the previous one,” the economist noted.
At this point, he again raised doubts.
He pointed out that BCV data show that public sector GDP “grew on average 9.93% quarter-on-quarter, which seems extremely exaggerated.”
“That implies a cumulative growth of more than 40%, which is quite striking.”
He also noted that BCV figures show “a nominal GDP growth of 250% from the first quarter of 2021 to now, which seems excessive.”
“This would make us wonder why wages have not increased if the economy has grown so much.
That would likely be the most extreme growth rate in the world, but no one really believes it is plausible,” Sutherland argued.
Construction Sector
Regarding the 18.30% decline in construction, the economist made several observations.
“A contraction of 18.30% seems quite plausible given recent political events, but the previous growth reported by the BCV—above 15%—is quite unlikely,” he explained.
On the link between construction and employment, he said there is “a very important relationship between construction GDP and the number of workers in the sector, which generates positive effects, but the problem is structural.”
From his perspective, “the economy remains constrained and tied down. It continues to face many obstacles deliberately imposed by the government, which prevent growth.”
“In construction, credit is essential. No one, unless you are a drug trafficker—only if you are a drug trafficker—buys a house with a bag full of cash dollars. Normally, people would buy homes through mortgages,” he said.
He added that “with the highest bank reserve requirement in the world and all the constraints imposed on the financial system, that is impossible.”
Sutherland noted that in Venezuela, “mortgage loans are microscopic. They are probably 5.7 % of what they were in 2011. They have practically disappeared.”
“In these conditions, building is very difficult, very expensive, and people cannot access housing,” he concluded.
Finally, he stated that “in that sense, practically nothing has changed after January 3. There have been no changes in economic, monetary, or fiscal policy, and everything remains more or less the same.”
