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> ARGENTINA SACRIFICES ECONOMY TO WARD OFF VIRUS, WINNING PRAISE

BY PATRICK GILLESPIE & JORGELINA DO ROSARIO, BLOOMBERG –

- BY PATRICK GILLESPIE & JORGELINA DO ROSARIO BLOOMBERG @PAT_GILLESPIE, @JDOROSARIO

When Alberto Fernández visited Mexico on his first foreign trip after winning last year’s election, he said that both countries would face the “challenge of globalisat­ion” together.

Less than five months later, the respective stances of Argentina’s president and Mexico’s leader, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, to fighting the coronaviru­s pandemic couldn’t be further apart.

Whereas the Mexican president has only now started urging citizens to stay at home – after encouragin­g them to eat out to support the local economy – Argentina shuttered social life and imposed a strict stay-at-home policy a week ago, even at the risk of disproport­ionately affecting the livelihood­s of Fernández’s mostly middle-to-lower class voter base.

Key to that decision was the upgrade of the virus to a pandemic and stark conversati­ons with leaders at the heart of fighting the disease, people familiar with the strategy said.

“The choice is to take care of the economy or take care of lives,” Fernández said Wednesday. “I chose to take care of lives.”

In Latin America, where huge numbers of people rely on the informal economy to survive, there are no good options for leaders. The Frente de Todos leader’s decision to go all-in to fight Covid-19 stands out not just for its contrast with Mexico but also with Brazil, where President Jair Bolsonaro has downplayed the risks and publicly clashed with state governors who are taking stringent measures to combat the virus locally.

MAKE OR BREAK

“This is a make or break moment for Alberto Fernández to show he’s in control and leading the country,” said Jimena Blanco, head of Latin America political research at consulting firm Verisk Maplecroft. “The worst scenario is to get a disorderly response – or no response at all – which is what we’re seeing in Mexico and Brazil.”

Fernández’s move to put his country into quarantine was deeply influenced by the World Health Organisati­on’s March 11 announceme­nt that the coronaviru­s was a pandemic, according to a senior government official.

Dr. Maureen Birmingham, the WHO representa­tive in Argentina, is in constant communicat­ion with the authoritie­s and Fernández himself.

That decision was reinforced when the president saw cases balloon rapidly in Italy and Spain – two countries where many Argentines’ ancestors hail from.

Prior to his announceme­nt of a lockdown, Fernández spoke with the Italian and Spanish prime ministers, Giuseppe Conte and Pedro Sánchez, to hear their experience­s, the official said. Fernández developed good relations with both men after visiting them earlier this year. Mexico’s president is by contrast famously loath to travel abroad.

He also wanted to buy time for Argentina’s healthcare system by trying to flatten the curve as soon as possible, the official said. The president speaks on a daily basis with Buenos Aires Province Governor Axel Kicillof and City Mayor Horacio Rodríguez Larretta, where most cases are concentrat­ed.

On Thursday night, the government ordered the closing of the borders to stop even Argentines from going out and into the country until the quarantine ends. At the same time, Fernández, who has publicly conceded his strategy will put the economy in a bigger hole, has said that he expects cases to peak in the first half of May and is willing to extend the lockdown that ends March 31 if needed.

in Argentina, a land of chronic financial crisis and fiercely divisive politics, the challenge of tackling the coronaviru­s is bringing an unusual sense of unity. Fernández stood together with leaders from different ends of the political spectrum for the March 19 lockdown announceme­nt, a rare display of consensus made all the more unlikely given that the country is enduring a third year of economic crisis and again flirting with default.

UNDER THE SHADOW

Beyond purely humanitari­an motives, the show of consensus hands the president an opportunit­y to emerge from the shadow of his vice-president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, the twotime former president who was instrument­al in catapultin­g him to victory last October.

“A mass external shock that makes things terrible everywhere, instead of just where you are, can be politicall­y useful,” said Daniel Lansberg-rodríguez, a geopolitic­al risk analyst who teachesatn­orthwester­nuniversit­y’s Kellogg School of Management. “The early adopters were often the leaders who were most ready to change the conversati­on.”

Polls shows a majority of Argentines approving the government’s response. Still, it’s a huge gamble for Fernández. While the wealthy can sit out the crisis working from home, that’s not a luxury afforded the less well-off who make up his base. As of 2018, almost half of Argentine workers were in the informal economy, according to the research institute at the Catholic University of Argentina (UCA), including jobs like street vendors and household workers.

The government’s financial response to the crisis has attempted to bridge that gap, with measures like extra payments for low-income parents and retirees, a 10,000-peso (US$155) transfer for informal and some independen­t workers in April, and a price freeze on 2,300 essential products.

HARSH MEASURES

There is still no guarantee that his harsh measures, also implemente­d by some other smaller economies such as Chile, Peru and Colombia, will be successful in fighting a pandemic that’s quickly spreading throughout Latin America.

Cases rose to 589 as of Thursday evening, with 12 deaths recorded. Also, with just about 2,800 tests performed this month, Argentina shows a poor testing rate when compared to neighbours like Chile, where President Sebastián Piñera’s government has conducted more than 7,500.

The sudden bipartisan cordiality may not last long either. Yet it still represents a political bargain notably absent in Brazil and Mexico, the region’s number one and two economies respective­ly.

It’s true the coronaviru­s offers a distractio­n for Fernández, who has yet to unveil a comprehens­ive plan to lead the country out of economic crisis. It also justifies more social spending on his base. Regardless of any political motives, he may have bought Argentina valuable time to fight the virus.

“We saw what was happening in Europe, we had the images in newspapers of Spain and Italy, countries very close to us, that created anxiety and stress in Argentina, and the government went out to attack the situation,” said Juan Negri, a political science professor at Torcuato Di Tella University in Buenos Aires. “He’s trying to anticipate the worst case scenario of a social crisis exploding.”

It’stooearlyt­osayiffern­ández’s approach will work any better than those of López Obrador or Bolsonaro. But if it does, he might just have a chance to heal Argentina’s bitter political divide, la grieta, according to Blanco, of Verisk Maplecroft.

“If steered well, it could cement him as the leader for the population, including people who didn’t vote for him,” she said.

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IMAGE: JOAQUIN TEMES

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