The Borneo Post

Argentina at the mercy of debt markets to fund reforms – Macri

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ARGENTINA’S ambitious reform plans will be vulnerable to global debt markets in the coming years, said President Mauricio Macri, who gave his clearest indication yet that he will seek a second term to fulfil them.

Macri said in an interview with Bloomberg News on Tuesday that it will take time to lower double- digit inflation and to cut labour costs that have kept real- economy investors at bay. Meanwhile, he must borrow to plug inherited deficits. S& P Global Ratings on Nov 6 included Argentina among a list of five countries that would be most endangered if financial conditions deteriorat­e, along with Turkey, Pakistan, Egypt and Qatar.

Macri acknowledg­ed the country’s precarious position.

“We are vulnerable, because we need financing; arguing against that is stupid,” Macri said. However, “we have the best potential, compared with all the others. I am ready to continue if the citizens indicate that they want me to continue running the country.”

Macri, 58, was in New York to speak with investors as he embarks on a second wave of reforms after his centre-right Cambiemos alliance won a clear endorsemen­t in legislativ­e elections last month. He said Argentina’s possibilit­ies outweigh its risks, citing plans to double food production in the next four years and the potential of producing renewable energy and shale gas.

Argentina will issue about US$ 30 billion ( RM129 billion) in net debt next year, with the goal of selling about half internatio­nally and the rest locally, said Finance Minister Luis Caputo, who accompanie­d the president. Only about 20 per cent of Argentina’s debt is denominate­d in pesos, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, which leaves it at the mercy of volatility in global currency markets.

Still, the nation of 44 million, South America’s second-biggest economy, is on something of a roll. Yields on the nation’s bonds fell as much as 130 basis points this year to a record low and S& P raised the credit rating one level for the sovereign debt.

Optimism has soared after Cambiemos’ electoral success, according to opinion surveys, and Macri’s approval rating has risen to 47 per cent, among the highest in Latin America.

The economy continues to post encouragin­g figures as it accelerate­s out of last year’s recession. And Macri’s infrastruc­ture projects are driving the constructi­on industry as investment and private consumptio­n start to pick up.

Reducing inflation and cutting the fiscal deficit remain Macri’s main economic objectives. Last Tuesday, the central bank unexpected­ly raised borrowing costs for the second time in less than a month, pushing up the key rate by a full percentage point as the nation tries to combat inflation.

Macri said he expects inflation to slow to 15 per cent by the end of 2018, missing the bank’s target range of eight per cent to 12 per cent. He said he sees salary increase negotiatio­ns with unions for next year ending “a bit lower” than 15 per cent.

Looking outside the nation’s borders, Macri has sought to draw upon a relationsh­ip with President Donald Trump that dates back to the 1980s, when they worked together on potential real- estate projects in New York. The connection has yielded mixed results.

Argentine officials travelled last week to Washington to negotiate with the Commerce

We are vulnerable, because we need financing; arguing against that is stupid. Mauricio Macri, President

Department after the US said it would impose duties of 70 per cent on Argentine biodiesel imports worth about US$ 1.2 billion. Argentina would be willing to apply an export tax of 15 percent and might also accept a quota to satisfy US producers that brought a dumping complaint, Macri said.

“I am fortunate, because I have known Donald since I was 24 years old and that gives us a chance to communicat­e and talk in a very straight and clear way,” said Macri, who has spoken several times to Trump since his election.

“We are ready to tax our exports of biodiesel as we are taxing our soy exports, which are the only ones that remain with this stupid export tax.”

Exports remain an area of frustratio­n for the president. Macri said the Mercosur trade group, which includes Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay, likely will sign a free-trade agreement with the European Union by year- end.

But he said Argentina is frustrated by Mercosur’s lack of progress striking such deals.

“We are not happy at all,” Macri said “We have to be more dynamic with Mercosur, inside Mercosur and with the rest of the blocs.”

So Macri is left to consolidat­e domestic victories and build momentum before the 2019 presidenti­al election. A week after the legislativ­e votes last month, he summoned political, business and union leaders to Buenos Aires to present plans for the new wave of reforms. He has drafted bills to reduce labor costs, streamline a costly pension system and reform the public prosecutor’s office.

“We are finding very good agreements on this basic consensus, and I expect that we will sign all these new laws and approve them before the end of the year,” he said.

“That will give an extra clarity to foreign investors that Argentina is by far the best place you can invest in in the near future.” — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Argentine President Macri speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview in New York on Nov 7. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Argentine President Macri speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview in New York on Nov 7. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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