Las Vegas Review-Journal

Argentina unveils austerity plan

Axed ministries, new taxes part of bid to end turmoil

- By Almudena Calatrava The Associated Press

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Argentina’s President Mauricio

Macri announced new taxes on exports and the eliminatio­n of several ministries on Monday in a bid to halt economic turmoil that has sent the peso to record lows.

Macri said in a televised statement that he will also allocate more economic aid and strengthen food plans for Argentines who suffer from poverty and have been affected by skyrocketi­ng inflation running at more than 30 percent this year.

“To start building the country we want, we have to balance our accounts with a state that spends less than what it receives,” he said.

In recent weeks, the currency crisis in Argentina has intensifie­d, forcing the government to ask for the early release of a credit line from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund under a $50 billion backup financing arrangemen­t approved earlier.

When Macri took office in 2015, he promised to trim Argentina’s fiscal deficit, reduce poverty and curb inflation.

However, he has struggled under the weight of the country’s economic problems.

The latest moves come as Macri seeks to calm markets and restore confidence to Argentines who continue to lose purchasing power.

The peso closed at 37.4 pesos per greenback on Friday and tumbled an additional 4 percent to 39.3 pesos per dollar after the president spoke, suggesting the announceme­nt had done little to reassure investors.

The government will now undertake a so-called ‘deficit zero’ plan intended to balance the budget in 2019 and stanch the currency’s steep devaluatio­n.

“These were the worst five months of my life since I was abducted,” the president said, referring to the early 1990s when he was kidnapped and held for 12 days by criminals who demanded several million dollars in ransom.

He said he will ask more from exporters because they “have more capacity to contribute” and had benefited from the devaluatio­n.

He also acknowledg­ed that a tax on exports is “very bad,” but he said it was necessary because there was an “emergency” situation.

At a press conference later in the morning, Argentina’s Economy Minister Nicolas Dujovne said that a tax of 10 cents would be levied for each dollar of primary exports and services, and an additional tax of 7 cents would be levied on other exports.

The number of ministries will also be reduced by nearly half, although no additional details were immediatel­y available. As part of the changes, Dujovne himself takes the reins of the Economy Ministry and the treasury department will now cease to exist.

He said the government now intends to have a fiscal surplus of 1 percent of GDP in 2020.

 ??  ?? Mauricio Macri
Mauricio Macri

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States