The Phnom Penh Post

Argentina rejects remaining IMF money

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ARGENTINEA­N presidente­lect Alberto Fernandez said on Tuesday t hat he would renounce the remaining $11 billion tranche of the country’s Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) loan as soon as he takes office next month.

Outgoing President Mauricio Macri agreed to a massive $57 billion loan package last year, but the austerity measures he imposed failed to right the country’s economy.

“What I want is to stop asking [for money], and that they let me pay [existing outstandin­g loans],” said Fernandez, who takes office on December 10 after ousting Macri in last month’s elections.

“I have an enormous problem. And I’m going to ask for $11 billion more?” the incoming president said in an interview with Argentina’s Radio Con Vos.

Fernandez said he will “try to revive the economy in order to pay and solve the debt problem sensibly”.

The return to power of the protection­ist Peronists has raised fears of yet another debt default and eroded the peso’s value.

Argentina’s poverty rate has risen to more than 35 per cent; inflation for the year to September was at almost 38 per cent; while the peso has steadily depreciate­d by some 70 per cent since January last year.

The president-elect has insisted his government would not default but rather seek to renegotiat­e the terms of the IMF loan, and sought to reassure voters in last month’s election that their bank deposits would be safe under his administra­tion.

“It’s like a guy who drinks a lot and is a little drunk. The solution is not to continue drinking. The solution is to stop drinking,” he told the radio.

Debt soared by hundreds of billions of pesos under Macri and now exceeds 90 per cent of GDP. At the time of his election in 2017, it was 38 per cent of GDP.

“I try to be a serious person. A person who tells you ‘I’m going to do such and such a thing,’ and you know he’s going to do it.

“I don’t want to sign agreements that I’m not going to fulfil. Those agreements were already signed by Macri. He signed one, two, three and fulfilled none,” Fernandez said.

The IMF suspended the release of a $5.4 billion disburseme­nt in September following the government’s failure to meet the inflation targets imposed as conditions for the loan.

“We want them not to lend us more money, but to let us develop. Let’s discuss the time I need to develop, but don’t give me more money.”

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