Economy
Related: About this forumEchoing 2001 crisis, Argentina's Macri appoints "superminister"
Following a turbulent month in local markets, Argentine President Mauricio Macri ordered the promotion of Economy Minister Nicolás Dujovne to a superminister with coordinating powers over nine of the nation's 20 cabinet ministries.
The move comes after a run on the peso forced the central bank to sell off $7.7 billion from its reserves from April 23 to May 15, during which the peso nevertheless tumbled from 20 to 25 to the dollar.
While the peso has since stabilized, the panic forced Argentina's Central Bank to raise its discount rate from 27% to 40%, borrow $2 billion from the Bank for International Settlements, $2 billion from the New York-based vulture fund BlackRock, as well as request a stand-by credit line from the IMF for a whopping $30 billion.
Dujovne, 51, is media-savvy but controversial. He became one of several Macri officials listed in a tax whitewash scandal when it was revealed in April that he had obtained amnesty in 2016 for $1.3 million in undeclared income kept offshore.
His promotion is also seen as a signal to U.S. President Donald Trump, whose son Eric hired the minister's father, architect Berardo Dujovne, in 2012 to design Trump Tower Punta del Este, a luxury condominium building in neighboring Uruguay.
Deficit hawk
Dujovne has nevertheless moved quickly to reduce record fiscal deficits by cancelling further tax cuts to the influential soy export sector. Further cuts to subsidies and public works have also been announced.
Corporate tax cuts and rising interest payments on high-yield LEBAC notes have pushed budget deficits under Macri to a record $38 billion, while removing protectionist measures has doubled current account deficits to $31 billion.
The public debt has meanwhile grown by a third in two years, to $320 billion - of which over half is now foreign debt.
Opposition lawmakers have slammed the proposed austerity measures, noting that subsidy cuts have already led to utility hikes of up to 1700%. The lower house passed a bill on May 9 freezing utility rates at their December 2017 levels - legislation Macri has threatened to veto should it pass the senate.
Back to the future
The IMF stand-by and the naming of a superminister recall the country's 2001 crisis, after '90s era privatizer Domingo Cavallo was given the same title in an effort to calm markets.
Cavallo's appointment, as well as a $38 billion bulletproof IMF stand-by similar to the one now being sought, were instead interpreted as crisis moves, and by December 2001 Argentina defaulted on a then-record $83 billion in sovereign debt.
The economy later recovered under the populist Néstor and Cristina Kirchner administrations from 2003 to 2015, though growth sputtered after exchange controls were imposed in 2012 in an effort to curb current account deficits.
Cavallo, who is reportedly back as an informal adviser, criticized Macri last week for rescinding the exchange controls without first tackling inflation, currently running at 31% on an annualized basis.
At: https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.eltelegrafo.com.ec%2Fnoticias%2Fmundo%2F8%2Fargentina-nicolas-dujovne-ministro-ajuste-fmi&edit-text=
Macri's new superminister Nicolás Dujovne: In search of market confidence.
Exotica
(1,461 posts)Vulture capitalism and bankster rule at its finest.
Argentina has, since the late 1970s, been something of a canary in the coal mine in that regard.
enid602
(8,643 posts)Lucky for Argentina Trump pissed off the Mexicans, who are now buying Argentine corn. Lucky for Argentina Trump pissed of the Chinese, who are now buying a lot of Argentine soybeans and sorghum. Unlucky for the US, whose agricultural exports historically at least partially offset their trade deficits.
sandensea
(21,650 posts)All of which have worsened quickly under Macri as he's moved to deregulate trade and finance.
The current account deficit, which as you know measures trans-national credits and debits, doubled to $31 billion last year - and may reach $40 billion this year.
If so that would be 6% of GDP, compared to just 2.4% for the U.S. - and Argentina can't print endless dollars to finance theirs, like we do ours.
That - plus over-reliance on short-term speculative capital - is what got them into trouble in 2001 (and what trouble!).