The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Peso crisis highlights fragility of Argentina’s economy

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BUENOS AIRES: Argentina appears to have resolved, at least in the short term, the crisis over the peso and its depreciati­on by taking drastic action – but analysts warn the policy is untenable over time.

To sustain the Argentinia­n peso, the Central Bank raised its benchmark interest rate up to 40 per cent and injected more than US$10 billion into the economy.

A crisis of confidence in the peso saw it plunge nearly 20 per cent over six weeks as investors concerned by Argentina’s high inflation yielded to the lure of a strong dollar.

On Monday, the unit dipped to a historic low of 25.51 against the dollar, as talks continued with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund for a stabilizin­g loan.

Argentina’s center-right president, Mauricio Macri, has sought to be reassuring, saying Thursday that “we consider the turbulence overcome.”

But he pointed the finger at an endemic problem: the budget deficit of Latin America’s third largest economy – even though it has dropped from six to four per cent of gross domestic product since he took power in late 2015.

“It’s a real structural problem, well identified for a long time by the IMF, difficult to resolve politicall­y,” said Stephane Straub, an economist at the Toulouse School of Economics.

“If rates remain at this level, it will pose problems in the mediumto-long term.

But confidence must return in order to reduce the rates. That’s where the interventi­on of the IMF can be useful, to bring back confidence and halt the flight of capital and the pressure on the currency.”

Annual inflation at more than 20 per cent and a balance of trade deficit still stifle economic reform efforts in an economy whose annual growth was 2.8 per cent in 2017.

For Argentine economist Matias Carugati, the recent instabilit­y in foreign exchange rates reflects “a crisis of confidence due to the fact that Argentina is quite a fragile economy.”

An interest rate of 40 per cent “is not sustainabl­e in the medium term. It is a very short term rate to reassure the exchange market.”

Strangled by debt during the economic crisis of 2001, Argentina was declared in default.

Since then, any economic turbulence reminds Argentines of a painful episode in the country’s recent past.

Macri’s center-right government, elected in 2015, has insisted that the measures are temporary – a time to clean up the economy after years of mismanagem­ent, and that liabilitie­s remain moderate.

But Argentina’s indebtedne­ss has exploded over the past two years, and the opposition is worried.

The recent issuance of very attractive Treasury bonds to investors is further accentuati­ng debt.

For Carugati, there is no reason to panic “if it’s a one-off, it’s not recurrent.

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