Jamaica Gleaner

Argentina will get next instalment of bailout as IMF praises Milei’s austerity policies

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THE INTERNATIO­NAL Monetary Fund, Argentina’s biggest creditor, agreed Monday to release the next tranche of loans due under a bailout program, endorsing government austerity measures so severe they even surpass the terms of its US$43 billion loan.

The IMF deal follows t he completion of its review of Argentina’s compliance record and confirms the next US$792 million payment will become available to the government i n June, reassuring markets and boosting confidence among bankers about Argentina’s prospects as it goes through its worst economic crisis in two decades.

The decision by the fund’s technical staff still requires final approval from the IMF’s executive board, which could take weeks.

Argentina’s annual inflation rate reached 287 per cent in March, among the highest in the world, deepening poverty and spurring strikes and protests. But the IMF praised President Javier Milei’s libertaria­n government for a number of economic successes — Argentina’s first quarterly fiscal surplus in 16 years, falling monthly inflation and surging sovereign bond prices.

To overhaul the beleaguere­d economy, Milei has slashed public sector wages, eliminated thousands of state jobs, frozen public works projects and and cut subsidies. He has also devalued the nosediving peso currency by over 50 per cent, helping it stabilize but causing the prices of basic goods to skyrocket.

Although brutal for Argentina’s poor and middle classes, the market-friendly overhaul has “resulted i n faster-thanantici­pated progress in restoring macroecono­mic stability and bringing the program firmly back on track,” the IMF said, thanking Argentine authoritie­s for “the decisive implementa­tion of their stabilizat­ion plan.”

The praise marks a dramatic turn-around from the past six decades during which Argentine politician­s showed little interest in enacting reforms stipulated as part of borrowing agreements.

Previous left-leaning government­s fell far short of IMF targets and relied on central bank money printing to finance treasury spending, pushing the country’s IMF program — launched in 2018 and refinanced in 2022 — to a breaking point.

The internatio­nal lender remains deeply unpopular in Argentina, where the public blames it for an economic implosion and debt default in late 2001. The IMF later acknowledg­ed it made mistakes contributi­ng to the collapse.

It’s rare for a country to have the IMF as its biggest creditor. Argentina is in the strange position of relying on money lent by the fund to repay the fund itself.

 ?? AP ?? President of Argentina Javier Milei.
AP President of Argentina Javier Milei.

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