Perfil (Sabado)

Fear the walking dead

- by MICHAEL SOLTYS* Michael Soltys, who first entered the Buenos Aires Herald in 1983, held various editorial posts at the newspaper from 1990 and was the lead writer of the publicatio­n’s editorials from 1987 until 2017.

TIt’s impossible to speculate about next year’s elections with almost 15 months still to go – if a week was a long time in politics for Britain’s Harold Wilson, 15 months in Argentina is more like 15 centuries.

he recent French kick of the eccentric New England academic Dr Hale is stretching into August because he has picked up today’s anniversar­y of the collapse of French feudalism in the wake of “La Grande Peur” (the great fear) of social unrest, leading him to speculate about the potential for panic today. He writes:

“All roads lead to Paris rather than Rome in my recent experience. Bastille Day three weeks ago – prompting my defence of Lexington as the true cradle of the modern world and followed the next day by the French World Cup triumph and then by Christine Lagarde’s presence in your city – started me reading upa bitontheFr en ch Revolu ti onan dI not et hat this coming Saturday, August 4, is the anniversar­y of the 1789 National Assembly session when three weeks of intense social turbulence nationwide following the fall of the Bastille (known in French as ‘ La Gran

de Peur’) panicked the feudal classes into renouncing all their privileges more or less spontaneou­sly.

“Not that I’m expecting anything dramatic this weekend (especially with the dollar closing out July so calmly) and it might be melodramat­ic to equate it with a ‘ grande

peur’ panic bu tI detecta growingapp rehension about Argentina’s prospects among Wall Street investors. Concretely that the vicious circle of stagflatio­n might persist long enough to swing next year’s vote, frustratin­g President Mauricio Macri’s re-election and returning an increasing­ly popular (and populist) Cristina Fernández de Kirchner to power. Does such alarmism reflect the current Argentine mood? And (a much longer shot) any chance of panic leading to a sacrifice of corporate privileges as in the climax of ‘ La Grande Peur’?” My reply: “The answers to your questions are not all up to Argentina. Global investors are more inclined to look at regions rather than countries with Brazil and Mexico both much larger economies than Argentina. Mexico already opted for populism last month and were Brazil to follow suit in October, this might seem to confirma t renda longtheli ne so fOscarWild­e’ s formula of once being a misfortune but twice looking like carelessne­ss. This perception of a regional populist trend would not be easily changed even if Macri did manage to dig himself out of his current hole. Such an image would create a perfect storm for emerging markets in Latin America at least – the forces driving the ‘flight to quality’ are already strong enough without supplying every reason for the exodus from the other end.

“From the more local standpoint, it’s impossible to speculate about next year’s elections with almost 15 months still to go – if a week was a long time in politics for Britain’s Harold Wilson, 15 months in Argentina is more like 15 centuries. Just to give you a couple of examples at random, neither then-Santa Cruz governor Néstor Kirchner nor former Mendoza senator José Octavio Bordón were even ment ion edhalf ayeara he ad of the 2003 and 1995 elections respective­ly, yet the former ended up as pre si dentwhilet­h el at te r was an impressive runner-up with five million votes or 30 percent. A CFK candidacy does indeed look increasing­ly inevitable but far less her victory – her opinion poll numbers of 30 percent in Buenos Aires province and around 20 percent in most other districts fall well short of guaranteei­ng a triumph. And if she became a real threat, the numerous corruption charges against her could always be accelerate­d – were that to happen, there would be fascinatin­g parallels with Brazil, where a jailed Lula remains the frontrunne­r.

“But this weekly economic report is straying into politics. The vicious circle of stagflatio­n is indeed in place with no certainty as to how many quarters it will last but no cause for panic from either of the most immediate symptoms of the crisis – the dollar and inflation. The greenback actually finished July five percent below its start (the first fall since last November), thus nominally terminatin­g the devaluatio­n crisis for now. The US$50 billion in reserve from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) stand-by deal obviously helps to tame the dollar but such relief will not be eternal (at the start of this century almost US$40 billion in early 2001 from a combo of IMF money and a megaswap of bonds did not even last out that year) and nor can statutory reserve requiremen­ts be raised indefinite­ly.

“As for inflation, it could hardly be worse than June’s terrifying peak of 3.7 percent and indeed most experts are expecting last month’s figure to be perhaps a full one percent lower, despite the usual upward pressures of winter holidays (with the Macri government claiming a new record of five million tourists, even if the CFK presidency posted 13 million in 2015 by including daytripper­s). Depleted purchasing­power blunts price increases while recessive interest rates also play their part yet the progress against inflation is limited – nobody is really expecting anything less than two percent in any of the remaining months of the year, thus ensuring inflation well above 30 percent for 2018. Furthermor­e, the inflationa­ry surge from devaluatio­n has knocked the bottom out of the correction of relative prices which earlier steep increases in utility billing was supposed to achieve (with transport still pending in the best of cases). Since food and other basic items have the highest inelastici­ty of demand, these go up the most. With both the wholesale (6.5 percent) and core (4.1 percent) inflation of June substantia­lly higher than the retail figure, this leaves plenty of damage in the pipeline, especially if the urgency of defusing the Lebac time-bomb is to be respected.

“Looking beyond these immediate indicators, the balance of payments is registerin­g improvemen­t (as it usually does after IMF agreements) and with both the twin fiscal and trade deficits. Primary deficit reduction is staying ahead of target with the overall figure including debt service coming home to roost further down the road. The trade gap is also narrowing – but more because of falling imports from peso devaluatio­n (which has also reduced the drainage from tourism abroad) rather than exports being more competitiv­e in the face of Asian and other alternativ­es. “What is the translatio­n of ‘ La

Grande Peur’ into modern English? Be afraid, be very afraid. But perhaps the outlook for Argentina is even worse – that unlike France there is no revolution, no renunciati­on of quasi-feudal privileges and nothing to break out of the cycle of the last seven decades.”

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