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‘Difficult months’ ahead for Macri and Argentina – even with IMF’s support

‘We have very difficult months ahead of us,’ president warns inflation-hit Argentines, after government seals updated US$57.1-billion deal with financial institutio­n.

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President Mauricio Macri has warned Argentines they face “very difficult months” ahead, after his government committed to tough austerity measures to meet the terms of an enlarged US$57.1billion bailout from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF).

“We have very difficult months ahead of us,” the president declared, arguing that his gov- ernment’s revamped deal would help his nation to emerge from a severe economic crisis.

“We knew it would not be easy, we are convinced that this is the only way,” Macri declared in a televised speech from the presidenti­al palace. “This must be the last crisis. Once the storm is over we will have growth again.”

Argentina’s currency has lost half its value against the dollar in 2018, hurting the purchasing power of millions of ordinary citize ns, al ongwithinf la ti onthat is forecast to reach over 40 percent by the end of the year.

On Friday, the dollar closed the week on 41.90 pesos, continuing to rise after closing Thursday at around 40.40 or 90 cents up on the previous day. But the closing figure still stayed short of the 44 pesos which would justify Central Bank interventi­on, according to Wednesday’s agreement with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF).

Yet the pressure is not only on the population. Even with the increased package, Macri’s centre-right Cambiemos (Let’s Change) administra­tion has its back to the wall, with disburseme­nt being linked to his pledge to erase the budget deficit from 2019.

Without a majority in Congress, Macri will have to convince a hostile Peronist opposition to adopt his government’s 2019 austerity budget with sweeping spending cuts. This will pose a severe challenge not only to the government’s attempts to work across the aisle, but to the president’s re-election bid, with the next presidenti­al vote scheduled for next year.

REVAMPED DEAL

The revamped agreement with the IMF will allow Argentina “to leave behind the turbulent path of recent months,” Treasury Minister Nicolás Dujovne said on Wednesday as the deal was announced, seated alongside the Fund’s Managing Director Christine Lagarde.

Dujovne said that the agreement “will be supported by an adequate and sustainabl­e budget and without interventi­on in the foreign exchange market.”

These funds “no longer have a precaution­ary nature but may be fully utilised [as necessary],” the minister added.

Explaining the agreement, Dujovne admitted that Argentina had faced “very volatile days.” But he said the government would “maintain our commitment to a flexible exchange rate.”

Lagarde, for her part, told the press that “every effort is being made to stabilise [Argentina’s] economy” and said the loan was designed to help the country “face its challenges” and support the most vulnerable sectors of the population.

She said she intended to send the new loan agreement to the IMF’s board for approval “as soon as possible,” addressing the Argentine reporters at the event in Spanish.

The IMF and the Macri administra­tion first agreed on a three-year, US$50-billion rescue lending programme back in June, as a currency crisis sent the peso plunging against the dollar. In the wake of continuing economic challenges and the wider global crisis facing emerging markets, the government subsequent­ly requested a more rapid disburse- ment, as it seeks to restore investor confidence and ease concerns that Argentina will not be able to meet its debt obligation­s next year.

Buenos Aires had already received a US$15-billion disburseme­nt, in the process raising interest rates to 60 percent, but any changes in the programme require the approval of the IMF board.

The new deal “front loads IMF financing,” the fund said in a statement, increasing by US$19 billion the amount due to be made available up to the end of 2019.

Setting the tone for the battles ahead, Axel Kicillof – former economy minister under Cristina Fernández de Kirchner’s government – called Macri’s austerity measures “a disgrace” and said governors and lawmakers would not vote for it.

Daniel Artana, chief economist with the Latin American Economic Investigat­ion Foundation, said Macri had inherited a broken economy from Kirchner in 2015 and was heading in the right direction.

“Argentina is committed to doing what it needs to do, it’s a steep drop in the budget deficit, but Kirchner’s economic legacy was a ticking bomb,” he said.

Many economists agree that the IMF has all but taken the reins of the Argentine economy.

“From now until the elections [October, 2019], it’s the IMF who is making the economic policy,” said Miguel Ángel Broda, an economist.

PAINFUL PROCESS

Argentina, of course, is a country that’s vulnerable to social upheaval, as witnessed on Tuesday, when a general strike brought the country to a standstill. Unions are up in arms and are demanding the government row back on pension cuts, tax increases, and the closure of factories they say have been par for the course since market-friendly Macri came to power in 2015. Getting to the holy grail of a zero deficit will be a painful process.

The primary fiscal deficit was six percent in 2015, 3.9

percent in 2017, and is expected to be 2.7 percent in 2018.

Analysts say a key point is that the new funds available would cover Argentina’s US£40 billion of external debt repayments due before the end of 2019, lowering the risk of rolling over the debt.

Moody’s analyst Gabriel Torres pointed out that “once it regains market confidence,” Argentina will have to find other sources of financing in the future. The agreement may give Argentina much-needed “room to manouevre, but it does not solve the problems.”

“Argentina is a very vulnerable economy, dependent on commoditie­s and also commoditie­s that are affected by the climate,” like grain and cereals. Aggravatin­g the crisis was the drought, which decimated soybean exports.

The government has learned that a “painful” recession lies ahead and recovery still seems far off for the region’s thirdlarge­st economy.

Industrial output saw its third consecutiv­e monthly decline in July, down 5.7 percent, and further disappoint­ing data is expected for August and September. The government estimates the economy will contract by two percent this year. Growth estimates have been slashed too, with a paltry 0.5 percent forecast for next year.

The government’s 2019 Budget proposal sees inflation coming in at 23 percent for 2019, with an average exchange rate of 40.1 pesos per US dollar.

Analysts say the first challenge is to stabilise the markets and boost economic output. The renegotiat­ed IMF deal is designed to e a se con cern so ver Argent in a’ s loan financing needs and currency fluctuatio­ns.

However, “the next few months will be economical­ly challengin­g for Argentina even if the deal accomplish­es these goals,” said Daniel Kerner, Latin America specialist at Eurasia Group.

 ??  ?? EITAN ABRAMOVICH / AFP
EITAN ABRAMOVICH / AFP
 ??  ?? President Mauricio Macri leaves the stage after a press conference at Government House on Thursday.
President Mauricio Macri leaves the stage after a press conference at Government House on Thursday.
 ??  ?? AP/ NATACHA PISARENKO
AP/ NATACHA PISARENKO

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