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>EDITORIAL: Loose talk

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Almost three years ago Mauricio Macri reached the presidency on the strength of a pledge underlying his various campaign promises to end several decades of stop-go, boom-and-bust cycles in favour of steady growth based on consistent ground rules, but all we have seen this week is one U-turn after another. And not just on one front either. The week started with a strong backlash (on both sides of the political fence and among the general public) against a gas surcharge announceme­nt sneaked in right at the end of last week in the hope that it would be forgotten over the weekend. But not even the shockwaves from far rightist Jair Bolsonaro’s massive first-round advantage in Brazil could stop the boomerang. No sooner had the government backtracke­d from this political blunder with a humiliatin­g loss of face, it was squirming again with the bewilderin­g contradict­ions of maverick deputy Elisa Carrió, at all odds with her image as the self-anointed moral and political conscience of the republic.

The gas fiasco highlights functional problems within the ruling coalition, but also an underlying collision course between economic strategy and electoral tactics. We can only assume mobile telephones had been disconnect­ed within the government (several days ahead of the problems reportedly looming for next Thursday), given the total lack of communicat­ion. Why was President Mauricio Macri emphasisin­g that bills had to be paid in the morning if a U-turn was coming later that afternoon? What was the point of the drastic streamlini­ng of the Cabinet (which also pooled the various economic portfolios) if Energy Secretary Javier Iguacel could go ahead with his resolution to slap the surcharge on future household gas bills to compensate utilities for their devaluatio­n losses without consulting Economy Minister Nicolás Dujovne? Such decisions need to be co-ordinated with broader considerat­ions of investors, the markets and wider economic strategy, not least passage of the 2019 budget which would have been jeopardise­d without the ignominiou­s retreat.

The Macri government needs to embark on some overdue self-criticism on these points, which does not mean they need succumb to the cheaper opposition critiques. Those who complain that gas bills have risen ninefold under the Macri presidency should also look at the starting-point – thus if it was not uncommon for these bills to be the price of a cup of coffee three years ago, due to Kirchnerit­e subsidies, should a month of gas for the price of nine coffees be considered totally unreasonab­le? The government will torpedo its chances of attracting overseas potential to the vast shale potential of Vaca Muerta, for example, if it constantly submits the energy utilities to politicall­y driven regulatory changes. Yet even the most important long-range plans also need to incorporat­e the short term – to impose this surcharge within the stagflatio­n of a recession projecting well into next year plus a 100-percent devaluatio­n does not look like very intelligen­t timing.

Carrió’s antics do not have any mitigating circumstan­ces, unlike the gas surcharge blunder’s saving grace of seeking to attract foreign investment. Space does not permit a detailed list of this week’s numerous torrents gushing in opposite directions but perhaps the worst was Thursday’s “just kidding, folks” attempt to calm the storm that she herself had raised – most people are not in a jocular mood amid a crisis of these dimensions. Her main target was Justice Minister Germán Garavano (sometimes seeking his resignatio­n and sometimes his impeachmen­t in a “you cannot quit because I’m firing you” spirit) but neither is this pressure justified nor is Garavano the real target – if her real problem is with Boca Juniors chief Daniel Angelici as a judicial operator, why does she not say so? Garavano’s misgivings about remanding ex-presidents in custody (if Carrió interprets this as preserving ex-president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner as the ideal electoral rival, the minister is hardly alone in this logic) are questionab­le but hardly grounds for dismissal. All noise which hurts the government without advancing her crusade against impunity.

The success of the Youth Olympic Games, currently being hosted in Buenos Aires, is perhaps this week’s most positive note and the mature attitude of the competitor­s has been anything but amateur. The same cannot be said of some of the government’s representa­tives over these past seven days. Maturity and improved dialogue would be most welcomed.

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