The Borneo Post

Argentina and IMF agree on US$50 billion loan

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BUENOS AIRES: The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) agreed with Argentina to a standby loan of US$50 billion over a threeyear period, Finance Minister Nicolas Dujovne said.

“We have looked to the IMF to avoid a crisis,” the minister told a news conference in Buenos Aires, adding there would be an “immediate” payment of US$15 billion.

“We are engaged in the constructi­on of a normal country. It is support for our program, with the goal of growing the economy and decreasing inflation and poverty,” he said.

The Argentine economy climbed 2.8 per cent in 2017, but growth slowed after a crisis of confidence that resulted in the loss of over US$ 10 billion of central bank reserves and saw the peso plunge by nearly 20 per cent.

That led Latin America’s thirdlarge­st economy to ask for IMF assistance to help it face mounting inflation, budget deficits and a weakening currency.

IMF managing director Christine Lagarde praised the agreement – still subject to approval by the institutio­n’s executive board – and Argentina’s economic plan.

“I am pleased that we can contribute to this effort by providing our financial support, which will bolster market confidence, allowing the authoritie­s time to address a range of long-standing vulnerabil­ities,” she said in a statement.

That effort includes measures to balance Argentina’s budget, lower inflation and ensure independen­ce for the central bank – while setting a floor on social spending and introducin­g tax reform.

“We are going to reinforce the autonomy of the central bank,” its chairman, Federico Sturzenegg­er, said at the news conference alongside the finance minister Dujovne.

Meanwhile, Dujovne added that Argentina has set a target of 17 per cent inflation for 2019, 13 per cent for 2020 and 9 per cent for 2021.

Argentina’s annual inflation target was 15 per cent for 2018, but had reached almost 10 per cent by April, and forecasts suggest it will hit 27 per cent.

“We are going to have increased inflation,” Dujovne acknowledg­ed.

The government has so far not managed to limit persistent­ly high inflation, which has exceeded 20 per cent for more than a decade, a key aim of President Mauricio Macri’s center-right government.

A path to reduce the budget deficit and balance the budget by 2020 was also agreed with the IMF.

The agreement revises the budget deficit target, before debt payment, to 2.7 per cent of GDP in 2018, compared to 3.2 per cent previously forecast. The eventual goal is a 0.5 per cent surplus in 2021. — AFP

 ??  ?? Argentina’s Central Bank Governor Federico Sturzenegg­er (left) and Argentina’s Finance Minister Nicolas Dujovne arrive for a press conference in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on June 7. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) agreed with Argentina to a...
Argentina’s Central Bank Governor Federico Sturzenegg­er (left) and Argentina’s Finance Minister Nicolas Dujovne arrive for a press conference in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on June 7. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) agreed with Argentina to a...

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