The Borneo Post

Argentina unveils ‘emergency’ austerity measures, grain export taxes

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BUENOS AIRES: Argentine President Mauricio Macri announced new taxes on exports in the world’s third-biggest soy producer and steep cuts to spending in an ‘emergency’ bid to balance next year’s budget, as his center-right government aims to persuade the IMF to speed up a US$50 billion loan programme.

The new austerity measures, announced by Macri and Finance Minister Nicolas Dujovne, were prompted by a 16-per cent slide in the peso last week that brought its losses to almost 50 per cent against the dollar this year.

The peso closed 3.14 per cent weaker after the new measures were announced on Monday, a US holiday.

Some analysts warned it could slip further in coming days as the focus turns to Washington, where Dujovne will start talks on Tuesday with Internatio­nal Monetary Fund officials about accelerati­ng disburseme­nts from the loan deal, agreed in June.

Macri said that far- reaching measures to balance the budget were the only way to draw a line under repeated bouts of financial turmoil over decades in Argentina.

“This is not just another crisis. It has to be the last,” Macri said in a televised national address.

Spending cuts will make up about half of savings needed to balance the budget next year, a year earlier than planned, said Dujovne.

Almost all new revenues will be funded with an export tax of 4 pesos per dollar on exports of primary products, including agricultur­al goods, and 3 pesos per dollar on other exports, he said.

The new taxes mark a step backward for Macri, a free-market advocate who slashed agricultur­al taxes upon taking office in 2015 to ‘normalize’ the economy after years of heavy state interventi­on under his predecesso­r, Cristina Fernandez.

“We know it’s a bad, terrible tax that goes against what we want to foster: more exports to create more quality jobs,” Macri said. But “it’s an emergency,” Macri added, promising to get rid of the tax once the economy stabilises.

The new taxes might delay internatio­nal shipments of grains from Argentina – the world’s No.1 exporter of soymeal and soyoil and a top shipper of raw soybeans and corn – as farmers and export companies monitor the exchange rate for the best time to sell.

The government expects the taxes to raise 432.812 billion pesos (US$11.39 billion) next year, roughly 2.3 per cent of GDP, as the farm sector is expected to post a strong rebound following a drought that hurt this year’s corn and soy harvests.

Investors have sought determined action from Macri’s government to close its budget gap amid concerns that a recession this year and the sliding currency would leave the government struggling to service its debt, most of which is in dollars.

Argentina’s economic woes have revived painful memories of a 2001-2002 economic crisis that plunged millions into poverty and shook the faith of internatio­nal investors in Latin America’s thirdlarge­st economy.

Repeating “We cannot keep spending more than we make,” Macri warned poverty would rise due to inflation running at more than 30 per cent. But he asked his countrymen to be patient.

“We’re facing this the best way we can,” Macri said.

The government said it would bolster social programs such as child welfare, reduce the number of ministries to 10 from 19, and slash next year’s capital spending – which supports infrastruc­ture developmen­t – by 27 per cent.

The contractio­n of the Argentine economy this year will be steeper than the 1 per cent recession projected, Dujovne said. But by 2020, Argentina should be able to post a primary fiscal surplus of 1 per cent of GDP, he said.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? People walk in Buenos Aires’ financial district, Argentina. Spending cuts will make up about half of savings needed to balance the budget next year, a year earlier than planned, said Dujovne.
— Reuters photo People walk in Buenos Aires’ financial district, Argentina. Spending cuts will make up about half of savings needed to balance the budget next year, a year earlier than planned, said Dujovne.

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