Analysts said the proposed sale reflects the socialist government's urgent cash shortage.
Last week, the state-owned oil company Petroleos de Venezuela SA signaled its interest in a finding a buyer for US-based Citgo Petroleum Corp in a bond prospectus. On Tuesday, Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez said Venezuela will sell Citgo if the price is right, but added that the government is not in a hurry to make a deal.
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He repeatedly floated the idea of selling the company, which operates refineries in Texas, Louisiana and Illinois and sells fuel through thousands of gas stations. Rival Gulf Coast refiners are seen as potential buyers.
Venezuela's government has long used its US company as a political tool. Chavez had Citgo distribute discounted heating oil to low-income American families in a high-profile program aimed at criticizing Washington's approach to the poor. More than 1.7 million Americans have received oil from Citgo to keep warm during the cold winter months, according to the subsidiary.
Many states initially rejected the program, but it was embraced by some. Former US Rep Joseph Kennedy II spoke out in its favor, saying Chavez cared about the poor at a time when the world elite turned a blind eye.
Venezuela, an OPEC member that has among the largest oil reserves in the world, is struggling to overcome an economic crisis after years of overspending that's fueled inflation now surpassing 60 per cent. The government has restricted Venezuelans' ability to obtain dollars as oil production has declined, forcing imports to fall and leading to record shortages in an oil-dependent economy where manufacturing is thin.
Outside analysts say President Nicolas Maduro needs to loosen currency controls to restore balance to the economy.
But the government's willingness to sell Citgo suggests a strong aversion to taking such dramatic steps, said Risa Grais-Targow, an analyst at the Washington-based Eurasia Group.
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