Kuwait Times

Macri calls on business, unions to back reform plans

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BUENOS AIRES: Argentina’s President Mauricio Macri called on business and union leaders to put aside their difference­s and back his government’s planned economic and social reforms in a speech Monday.

Macri pledged his government would maintain “austerity and order in the public accounts,” as well as favor employment, reduce taxes, lower inflation, punish corruption and strengthen Argentina’s institutio­ns. “I call on you to achieve basic consensus to draw a roadmap that gives us stability, and deliver a more just and integrated Argentina,” he said, addressing an audience of 170 mostly politician­s, business executives and union leaders in Buenos Aires.

“We are entering a state of permanent reformism.” However, the 68-year-old president gave no details of how his center-right government planned to carry out its program. Instead, Macri said, “We have concrete proposals that we will give in the coming months.”Ratings agency S&P raised Argentina’s long-term ratings to “B+” on expected economic improvemen­t and said the outlook was stable. “We expect that higher investment and better predictabi­lity in economic policies will sustain moderate but stable economic growth in the next three years,” it said. S&P added that the stable outlook reflected expectatio­ns that Macri’s government “will have greater political capacity to continue pursuing its economic agendas.”

Macri’s center-right Cambiemos, or “Let’s Change,” coalition emerged from mid-term elections last week with a strengthen­ed mandate for its reform program but still fell short of an overall majority in Congress, where it depends on alliances with leftist groups to pass laws. The three axes of the reforms, according to Macri, will be “fiscal responsibi­lity, creating more employment and institutio­nal quality.” The speech came as Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) officials gathered in Buenos Aires to begin a review of the economy, having already recommende­d that Macri make adjustment­s to taxation.

Argentina’s inflation is currently running at 18 percent, confoundin­g Central Bank efforts to maintain it between 12 and 17 percent this year. Unions protested against the government’s program in the streets surroundin­g the Kirchner Cultural Center building where Macri was speaking. — AFP

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