The Borneo Post

IMF increases Argentina crisis loan from US$50 to US$57 billion

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NEW YORK: The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has agreed to increase its crisis loan package aimed at restoring confidence in Argentina’s struggling economy by US$ 7.1 billion to US$ 57.1 billion, the South American country’s Finance Minister Nicolas Dujovne said.

The agreement “will allow our country to leave behind the turbulent path of recent months,” said Dujovne during a press conference with IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde, on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

Lagarde said the aim of the programme was to help Argentina “face its challenges” and support the most vulnerable population­s.

The agreement still needs to be approved by the IMF’s Executive Board and Argentina’s Congress, though.

Argentina originally secured a US$ 50 billion loan back in June, when an initial US$ 15 billion tranche was handed over.

However, last month, President Mauricio Macri revealed he had asked for an accelerate­d disburseme­nt of the remaining US$ 35 billion, with another US$ 3 billion not due until November and the remainder over the next three years.

The new deal “front loads IMF financing,” the Fund said in a statement, increasing by US$ 19 billion the amount due to be made available up to the end of 2019: a total of US$ 36.2 billion, according to Argentina’s finance ministry.

The ministry said that part of the agreement included a commitment to maintain “spending on social assistance ... above 1.2 per cent of gross domestic product” in order to “protect the most vulnerable sectors.”

Lagarde said Argentina has “developed a strengthen­ed economic plan that is aimed at bolstering confidence and stabilizin­g the economy.”

“A central element of the authoritie­s’ plan will be to reach budgetary balance by 2019.”

The announceme­nt of the agreement comes a day after Argentina changed its central bank president.

Some analysts claimed outgoing head Luis Caputo was at odds with the IMF over Argentina’s monetary strategy, leading to his replacemen­t by Guido Sandleris.

Lagarde said that “persistent­ly high inflation continues to erode the foundation of economic prosperity in Argentina” and to tackle it, the country’s “authoritie­s will shift towards a stronger, simpler, and verifiable monetary policy regime.”

She said Argentina would “contain the supply of money, and keep short-term interest rates at their currently” world-high level of 60 per cent, aiming to rapidly bring down inflation, expected to hit 40 per cent by the end of the year.

She said the central bank had “agreed to adopt a floating exchange rate regime, without interventi­on.” Sandleris confirmed this, but said the central bank would set upper and lower limits and maintain “strict control of growth of the monetary base in order to reduce inflation.”

He said a “new stage” was beginning in which “we’re leaving behind banking interventi­ons and returning to a focus on monetary policy as an anchor.”

Argentina’s economic woes were brought on by a rapid loss of confidence in its peso currency from April.

It has lost around 50 per cent of its value against the dollar since the start of the year, including 20 per cent in a two- day period in August after Macri announced he was seeking to renegotiat­e the IMF loan.

He has since introduced hugely unpopular austerity measures, including halving the number of government ministries and restoring taxes on grain exports.

Thousands of people took to the streets to protests against the austerity measures on Monday while the country was paralysed by a general strike on Tuesday.

The peso has largely stabilised since its August slump, although it lost 2.2 per cent on Tuesday following Caputo’s resignatio­n and another 1.2 per cent on Wednesday to close at 39.45 to the dollar.

If it passes 44 to the dollar, the central bank will intervene by selling up to US$ 150 million a day, whereas if the rate drops below 34, it will buy foreign reserves. — AFP

 ??  ?? People walk in Buenos Aires’ financial district in Buenos Aires, Argentina. — Reuters photo
People walk in Buenos Aires’ financial district in Buenos Aires, Argentina. — Reuters photo

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