With the $2 he earns in wages each week working as a cargo driver for Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA, 56-year-old Freddy Brito cannot even afford to buy one kilogram (2.2 lb) of cheese.  To feed himself and his wife as the once-prosperous OPEC nation suffers a hyperinflationary economic collapse, Brito depends on a monthly basket of rice, canned tuna, beans and other products valued at $200 given to him by California-based Chevron Corp ( CVX.N ), PDVSA’s minority partner at the Petroboscan field in western Zulia state where he works. But Chevron’s future in Venezuela now depends on U.S. President Donald Trump, who must decide here by Oct. 25 whether or not to renew a waiver allowing Chevron to keep operating in Venezuela despite U.S. […]