Perfil (Sabado)

Local economists warn of deeper slump as crisis continues

GDP predicted to contract by 2.5% this year, with banks also revising down forecasts for 2020.

- BY JORGELINA DO ROSARIO & DAVID BILLER

Argentina’s escalating financial crisis is prompting local economists to replace forecasts for a rebound in growth in 2020 with prediction­s of a third year of contractio­n.

The Central Bank on Tuesday released a monthly survey of economists which projected a toxic mixture of declining gross domestic product, faster inflation and a slump in the peso. The economy is now seen shrinking 2.5 percent in 2019 compared with a July projection of minus 1.5 per

cent. Banks such as Goldman Sachs and Barclays have also revised down their bets.

The sharp turnaround in fortunes comes as President Mauricio Macri looks almost certain to lose to opposition candidate Alberto Fernández in the October election. That outlook has scared investors and forced the current administra­tion to seek to pacify them with a re-profiling of the nation’s debt, price freezes, minimum wage hikes and even capital and currency controls.

“Argentina is heading for a credit crunch,” said Marcos Buscaglia, senior partner of the Buenos Aires-based investment firm Alberdi Partners.

“It’s also facing a loss of confidence, a brutal drop in growth and an increase in inflation.”

His firm had forecast a contractio­n of one percent this year; but now expects a two to three percent decline in GDP. For 2020, it anticipate­s the economy will shrink between four and five percent.

The central bank’s so-called ‘REM’ survey, which accepted its last forecasts on Friday, showed that the median expectatio­n among Argentine economists is now for a contractio­n of 1.1 percent in 2020, down from a previous projection of twopercent growth in July. Thirtynine economists took part in the poll, the lowest number since the start of 2018.

CHALLENGE

Forecastin­g Argentina’s unpredicta­ble economy is a challenge at the best of times. With polls published prior to the primaries showing a pretty evenly balanced contest, analysts had based their outlooks on a Macri win and a continuati­on of his pro-business policies. While Fernández’s plans for the economy remain deliberate­ly vague, his running-mate – former president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner – alarms investors horrified by her interventi­onist policies in her two presidenti­al terms of office, from December 2007 to December 2015.

Last Friday Goldman Sachs revised downwards its forecast for both 2019 and 2020, to minus 3.2% and minus1.6% respective­ly. Like Buscaglia, Alberto Ramos, the investment bank’s chief Latin America economist, stressed that the latest forecasts were tentative, given the fluid nature of developmen­ts in Argentina. Neverthele­ss, the trend is clear.

“Tighter financial conditions will significan­tly affect the performanc­e of the economy through the end of the year,” he said. “And we think those tighter conditions are with us for most, if not all, of next year.”

Inflation is now set to reach 55 percent by the end of year, up from an earlier estimate of 40 percent, the Central Bank survey also showed. Meanwhile the peso will fall to over 66 per US dollar by the end of 2019, compared with the prior forecast of 50 per greenback.

“Our main case for Argentina was disinflati­on, and now the scenario is upside down,” says Daphne Wlasek, XP Investment­s macro strategist. The company is now projecting inflation at 60 percent at the end of 2019 from 35 to 40 percent.

“Argentina’s macroecono­mic scenario changed completely from the primary vote,” she added. “Inflation is in an upward trajectory and growth won’t come anytime soon.”

 ?? BLOOMBERG/SARAH PABST ?? An exchange house in Buenos Aires.
BLOOMBERG/SARAH PABST An exchange house in Buenos Aires.

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