Perfil (Sabado)

Milei races against time to ease pain unleashed by shock therapy

President, who won last November’s run-off with 56% of the vote, is in a race against time to bring inflation back down and hold on to his popularity.

- BY MANUELA TOBIAS & KEVIN SIMAUCHI

Javier Milei finds himself up against the clock just four months into his term as Argentina’s president. Since taking the reins in December, he has cut federal aid for local government­s, devalued the peso, announced plans to terminate 70,000 state jobs and done away with price controls. But for all the economic pain that his “shock therapy” has unleashed on Argentines — annual inflation has soared to 276 percent — voter support is little changed from when he ascended to office.

Now, Milei, who won with 56 percent of the vote in November, is in a race against time to bring inflation back down and hold on to that popularity.

“I’m worried that if he takes too long to lower inflation, and the recession and the job losses along the way are too harsh, the government will start to lose that,” said Guido Sandleris, the president of Fundación Ecosur, professor at Johns Hopkins University and Central Bank governor under former president Mauricio Macri.

Hurdles abound. Soy, Argentina’s top export, is selling at lower prices than expected, jeopardisi­ng Milei’s hopes for a swift economic turnaround. And the opposition-led Congress, where his party holds only about 15 percent of seats, could curtail his post-victory honeymoon.

The lower house Chamber of Deputies has already picked apart a version of his sweeping ‘omnibus’ bill that sought to radically remake the government, even after the legislatio­n had been stripped of its most controvers­ial measures, including tax hikes and the privatisat­ion of state oil company YPF.

For now, Milei is still coasting. His approval rating is 49 percent, only a three-point slip since December, according to top polling firm Isonomía. The country’s sovereign bonds are the best performing among emerging markets so far this year after Ecuador, according to a Bloomberg index.

Alejandra González, 39, a gas-station janitor in Morón, a working-class municipali­ty just outside Buenos Aires, had long supported left-wing Peronist candidates or sat out elections altogether. But she voted for Milei because he represente­d a change, she said.

A single mother of five with a three-year-old granddaugh­ter, Gonzalez said her US$250 monthly salary wasn’t enough to feed her family, forcing her to turn to food banks. With things so bad for so long, she’s willing to grit her teeth and hope for something better.

“I already know what it’s like to be at rock bottom,” she said. “Now I’m waiting to see what else he can give us. We have to be patient.”

UNPRECEDEN­TED PHENOMENON

Despite half of Argentines saying they struggle to make ends meet each month, around a third of that group still supports the president. Juan Germano, the director of Isonomía, called this an “unpreceden­ted” phenomenon.

“Milei’s voters understand the present is bad, but they are very convinced about the future,” he said.

Many bond traders echo that confidence.

Dollar bonds due in 2030 are trading at some 52 cents on the dollar, levels not seen since the notes were issued in a September 2020 debt restructur­ing. The debt, which has handed holders a return of roughly 13 percent since then, has rebounded as Milei took office after months of intense volatility surroundin­g the libertaria­n’s emergence in last year’s vote.

“Debt performanc­e means investors are giving Milei the benefit of the doubt,” said Luca Sibani, a Milan-based money manager at Epsilon SGR.

Markets have grown less worried Argentina will default in July, when it has Us$1.7-billion due on hard currency bonds issued under New York law.

A local risk barometer is also approachin­g its lowest level in roughly three years, a signal to some money managers that it might be time to buy into the buzz.

“More investors are at least willing to test the waters,” said Mauro Roca, a managing director at the Los Angelesbas­ed TCW Group.

While Milei’s economic reforms started strong, it’s all relative: he inherited an economy in tatters. For average Argentines, the trauma of hyperinfla­tion still looms large.

Fernando Savore, the owner of a grocery store in Morón, has taken to breaking up one-kilo blocks of sugar into smaller packs and selling them at half the price. Otherwise his customers couldn’t afford sugar thanks to raging inflation, he said.

“Any Argentine knows what happens when you churn the money-printing machine because you would watch that 1,000-peso bill, with the same shape and colour, buy less things every time,” he said. “We know that didn’t work. So why not hold up hope?”

ROADBLOCKS

Yet things could go awry — and fast.

As the peso has stabilised, monthly inflation has slowed in recent months from a December peak of 26 percent percent. But analysts expect progress to stall as students return to school, unions negotiate wage hikes and the state strips subsidies that could eventually lead to some energy bills skyrocketi­ng by as much as 700 percent.

Diego Ferro, founder of M2M Capital in New York and a sceptic on Argentina bonds, said Milei wants to do the right thing, but “between trying and accomplish­ing it, there is a big difference.”

The weather gods may also scuttle Milei’s plans. While Argentina’s soy harvest is expected to be bountiful this year, low internatio­nal prices could limit its export windfall.

“There’s a big questionma­rk around what will happen in the next harvest, which means the government has no political power to spare,” said Ignacio Garciarena, a former agricultur­e official under Macri.

In Buenos Aires, Congress has halted progress on Milei’s two biggest initiative­s: the omnibus bill, which sought to expand executive powers, slash spending and reform the political system, along with a decree that deregulate­d vast swathes of the economy.

Milei got word of the lower house’s eviscerati­on of the omnibus, the centrepiec­e of his shock therapy agenda, while on a trip to Israel. From there, he ordered his top advisor to kill the legislatio­n and took to X to launch a tirade against the lawmakers who defied him, branding them “beasts” and “traitors.”

Following a spat between Milei and Argentina’s provincial governors over a localfundi­ng shortfall, in March a coalition of Peronists and moderates from the south overturned his executive decree in the senate. It now awaits its fate in the lower house.

Milei has invited Argentina’s governors and the mayor of Buenos Aires City to sign an agreement by May 25 that will offer them some fiscal relief in exchange for backing his ambitious reforms in Congress.

After meeting members of Milei’s Cabinet on March 18, Margarita Stolbizer, a moderate congresswo­man of the sort that Milei must court, said his government has, finally, begun listening to the other side.

“The problem is how long that actually lasts and if it coincides with the president’s strategy,” she said. “Or if tonight, the president will take to Twitter and insult us again.”

“There’s a big question-mark around what will happen in the next harvest, which means the government has no political power to spare.”

The financial organisati­on has firmly backed Milei since he took office last December. The La Libertad Avanza leader has vowed to achieve zero deficit this year, though his plan comes at the cost of a sweeping “chainsaw” plan to cut government spending.

“Both in January and February a fiscal surplus has been registered for the first time in over a decade, internatio­nal reserves are being rebuilt, inflation is falling faster than forecast and market indicators like the exchange rate gap and sovereign spread keep improving,” said Kozack.

Sovereign spread is a countr y’s cost of incurring foreign debt.

Authoritie­s in Argentina are implementi­ng “an ambitious plan of [macro-economic] stabilisat­ion” centred on “a strong fiscal anchor” which eliminates any government financing on the part of the Central Bank and policies aimed at reducing inflation and rebuilding reserves but “the road to economic stabilisat­ion is never easy and requires a firm implementa­tion of policies,” the spokespers­on said from Washington.

She said the IMF believes it is important “to keep improving the quality of fiscal austerity” and to adapt monetary policy during the “transition.”

Acknowledg­ing Argentina’s runaway inflation exceeding 250 percent per annum and the fact that more than 41 percent of the population lives below the poverty line, the financial organisati­on said it applauded “the recent efforts of the authoritie­s to broaden social assistance via the emblematic programme of child benefits with a correct focus and to protect the real value of pensions.”

The reforms need “social and political support to guarantee their durability and efficiency,” affirmed the spokespers­on.

Public-sectorempl­oyeeunions took to the streets in protest this week against the dismissal of almost 15,000 state workers.

Milei has refloated a credit programme of US$44 billion with the IMF, leading to “active discussion­s,” according to Kozack, who denied that a new plan was being negotiated.

“At this moment, it would be premature to discuss the modalities of a possible future programme,” she declared.

IMF Western Hemisphere Department director Rodrigo Valdes had said much the same in the previous week during a visit to Buenos Aires.

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 ?? ?? Internatio­nal Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva.
Internatio­nal Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva.

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