Perfil (Sabado)

Between the IMF and the markets

- by JAMES NEILSON*

The US$57 billion the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) is lending to Mauricio Macri’s government may be chickenfee­d for the likes of Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg – men whose companies are beginning to measure their worth in trillions – but for a flat-broke country such as Argentina the money could make all the difference between keeping things more or less as they are for a while before finally revving up and a rapid slide into African-style poverty. Hard as it evidently is for many to stomach, were it not for the willingnes­s of Christine Lagarde and her advisors to give Macri another chance, large numbers of people who – though far from well-off – still manage to make ends meet, could soon find themselves reduced to beggary, as have been so many of their counterpar­ts in Venezuela.

Having stumped up what by most standards is a sizeable amount of money, the IMF assumes it should have a say in what Macri’s government does with it. That, it seems, is one reason why Luis Caputo – who wanted to handle things his way and, in any event, weeks earlier had told his friends the job was not for him – suddenly left his post as governor of the Central Bank. He did so at a most inconvenie­nt moment, what with Macri in New York, where he was trying to convince influentia­l sceptics that despite appearance­s Argentina was a going concern, and back home belligeren­t trade unionists were staging yet another general strike, but that tends to be how things are done down here.

In any event, as was to be expected, the alleged role of the IMF in Caputo’s departure and his replacemen­t by Guido Sandleris was immediatel­y exploited by nationalis­ts and leftists who accused Macri of behaving like a colonial governor beholden to Mme Lagarde.

Those who think that way are not entirely wrong. There can be little doubt that the people running Argentina have handed over a bit of sovereignt­y in exchange for money which they desperatel­y need, but it so happens that all countries, even the United States, now and then have to adapt to internatio­nal circumstan­ces. The choice currently facing Argentina is not between untrammell­ed independen­ce on the one hand and servile subordinat­ion to tight-fisted imperialis­ts on the other, but between acquiring the means to repair a ramshackle economy while there is still time to do something and allowing it to sink even deeper into the mire.

When thanks to the “quantitati­ve easing” splurge that followed the implosion of Lehman Brothers cheap money was freely available, many assumed that the IMF has been rendered obsolete. From then on, optimists said, the markets would ensure that wayward countries would quickly come to their senses. From the point of view of tough-minded ideologues, that would be far better than the previous arrangemen­t in which political considerat­ions had to be taken into account, with the IMF negotiatin­g with untrustwor­thy characters who sooner or later would default on their debts, but from that of tens of millions of individual­s who are unable to influence economic policy, leaving everything in the ALL PHOTOS AP/MARCO hands of financiers who are interested only in making a profit would mean disaster. UGARTE

Foes of the IMF – of whom there are more in Argentina than in most other places – say the organism is evil because its loans are always accompanie­d by unwelcome conditions which are incompatib­le with national sovereignt­y. That is true enough, but it is not that hard to imagine what would happen were it not the case; politician­s and their cronies in countries such as Argentina would merely pocket the money and carry on as before, blaming the IMF for all the problems they would encounter.

Macri, Nicolás Dujovne and the rest of them may be perfectly sincere when they insist that the IMF is only backing the economic programme they drew up without asking foreigners for advice, but they must be aware that in the months to come they will be sorely tempted to make it less rigorous. When this happens, warning critics that the IMF watchdogs are glowering at them, baring their teeth and threatenin­g to withhold the money the country needs should help keep them on the straight and narrow.

Were there easier alternativ­es, straying from the path the people in charge of the economy have set themselves would not matter that much, but given the country’s record, letting up would in all likelihood prove disastrous. Over the years, dozens of what at first sight seemed to be promising economic programmes came to nothing because the government­s responsibl­e for them decided that it would beb et te rtol et ah ar d-pres sed population enjoya breather–Raúl Alfo nsínusedt os aya smuch–and ensure the government could recoup some of its political losses. Macri swears he will not allow this to happen on his watch; rightly or wrongly, the IMF has taken him at his word.

For the last couple of years, official spokespeop­le have been reminding us that for too long, 70 or 80 years, Argentina has lived far beyond her means and that this has to stop. Belt-tightening is clearly in order, but few think their own should be among those that get pulled in several notches. The government would like to see politician­s, union bosses, judges and other members of the judiciary (which here includes men and women who perform quite humble tasks) set an example, but as they are all more than able to fight their corner, they are unlikely to suffer much.

It is also understood that forcing businessme­n to bear the brunt of austerity would be counterpro­ductive as it will be up to them to drag the country out of the swamp into which generation­s of populists of one kind or another happily led it. It would therefore seem that, once again, people who are already hard up will be hurt the most by what is bound to happen before the economy finally starts recovering from its many self-inflicted woes. Just how all this will work out is impossible to say. The ongoing anticorrup­tion campaign is making many people who would not be averse to a spot of ‘revolution­ary’ violence increasing­ly nervous. Given the alternativ­es, let us hope that on this occasion Macri and the IMF have got it right, but it will be a close-run thing.

Having stumped up what by most standards is a sizeable amount of money, the IMF assumes it should have a say in what Macri’s government does with it.

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JOAQUIN TEMES
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