Venezuela’s Growing Reliance on Colombian Goods Deepens Trade Deficit

Official data from Venezuela’s Chamber of Economic Integration with Colombia (Cavecol) and Colombia’s National Administrative Department of Statistics (DANE) show that trade between both countries grew in May 2025.
However, almost all of that growth came from Colombia’s side. Total two-way trade reached $478.6 million, a 20% increase compared to the $399 million recorded a year before.
But Colombia sold $430.9 million worth of goods to Venezuela — up 25.3% — while Venezuela’s sales to Colombia fell 13.4% to just $47.8 million.
That means for every dollar Colombia spent on Venezuelan goods, Venezuela spent nearly nine dollars on Colombian products. The imbalance has clear roots.
Venezuela’s exports are still dominated by low-value goods like iron and steel products, fertilizers, aluminum, fuels, oils, and bulk chemicals. These items need little processing and face stiff competition from other suppliers.
Years of under-investment, outdated technology, and a shrinking industrial base limit Venezuela’s ability to diversify and produce higher-value goods.
Colombia Benefits as Venezuela Depends on Its Exports
Colombia, in contrast, benefits from a more competitive manufacturing and agricultural base. Its exports to Venezuela include processed foods, farming products, machinery, and consumer goods.
Reliable road transport and stable supply chains give Colombian exporters an advantage in meeting Venezuelan market demand quickly and consistently.
While easier border crossings and improved customs procedures have helped trade flow, Cavecol warns that Venezuela’s capacity to sustain such high import levels is vulnerable.
Falling household purchasing power and potential transport disruptions — from fuel shortages or security problems — could slow imports in the near future.
The story behind the story is that while trade volume makes headlines, the deeper trend is Venezuela’s growing dependence on Colombia for essential goods.
This dependence benefits Colombia’s exporters and border economies but leaves Venezuela with little ability to influence the trade balance.
It also limits Venezuela’s economic self-reliance, leaving its domestic market more exposed to changes in foreign supply and pricing.
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