An oil drilling rig in Anzoategui

Venezuela confirmed that it has entered recession, while annual inflation topped 63 percent, exacerbating the outlook for an economy already hit by crippling shortages and crashing oil prices.
The South American oil giant's economy shrank 2.3 percent in the third quarter, after contracting 4.8 percent in the first quarter and 4.9 percent in the second, the central bank said, the first time it has released the country's growth figures this year.
That is a new blow for leftist President Nicolas Maduro, whose approval rating is at a low of 24 percent going into legislative elections next year that could force the followers of late socialist firebrand Hugo Chavez from power for the first time since 1999.
Analysts had said for months that Venezuela was likely in recession.
But the diagnosis had not been confirmed by official statistics, which the central bank, in violation of its own rules, has released only irregularly as the economy has worsened in recent months.
The inflation rate, a figure that had not been released since August, came in at 4.7 percent for the month of November and 63.6 percent for the year -- among the highest in the world.
Maduro's government has introduced mandatory price cuts and rent controls in a bid to rein in the increases, but has not managed to get the inflationary spiral under control.
- Severe shortages -
Many analysts were expecting Maduro -- given the worsening situation and grim outlook -- to use his press conference to announce some economic policy shifts.
Yet in a marathon three-hour address, the president only unveiled his economic targets for 2015, rather than making new policy proposals to address severe shortages of basic goods.
Venezuela is estimated to have the largest oil reserves in the world but depends largely on imports for basic goods, including food and medicine.
Venezuelans can buy gasoline cheaper than bottled water but currently struggle to find milk, flour, cooking oil, toilet paper, deodorant, shampoo and other products.
The shortages helped fuel violent protests against Maduro's government from February to May in which 43 people were killed.
The central bank said the protests "prevented the proper distribution of basic goods to the population and the normal production of goods and services."
It blamed the demonstrations for an "economic reversal and a fall in economic activity."
Price increases were the sharpest for housing, food and alcoholic beverages, and restaurants and hotels, according to the central bank.
It has not published the index that measures scarcity since March, when it found that 19 categories of key products were experiencing "serious supply problems."
- Oil price slide hits hard-
Falling crude prices have taken a massive extra toll on a country that gets 96 percent of its foreign currency from oil.
According to Maduro, Venezuela's oil export price has plunged from $95 a barrel in September to $48 today.
He accused the United States of waging an "oil war" to hurt major crude producers like Venezuela and Russia, both currently at odds with the Americans.
A boom in shale oil in the United States has upended the world market, causing crude prices to hit a string of five-year lows in recent weeks.
Producers' cartel OPEC added to the downward momentum last month by ruling out a production cut -- a decision pushed through by wealthy Gulf states over Venezuela's furious opposition.