Perfil (Sabado)

Guzman: ‘There will be no devaluatio­n’

Economy minister says currency will depreciate ‘hand-in-hand with inflation, as blue dollar soars to record high of 195 pesos per greenback.

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Attempting to calm turmoil in financial markets, Economy Minister Martín Guzmán said yesterday that the government was not planning a rapid devaluatio­n of the peso.

In statements delivered during an interview with a local radio station – as the unofficial black-market or ‘blue’ dollar soared against the peso – the Us-educated economist said that the government would not take such a move.

“There will be no devaluatio­n. We are going to continue with the rate of depreciati­on of the peso against the dollar that we have been maintainin­g, going hand-in-hand with inflation,” he told Radio Con Vos. “In a process in which we are seeking to gradually and persistent­ly reduce inflation, at the speed you can.”

Stressing the exchange rate could not be stabilised “from one day to the other,” Guzmán admitted that the gap between the the official and unofficial exchange rate “is very high” and that it was sparking concern in the government.

Argentina’s main parallel exchange rate, the so-called “blue dollar,” has soared over the last two week and the last five days has offered little different.

Standing at 178 pesos per ‘blue’ greenback last Friday, it closed at press time at 195. By comparison, this week saw the official exchange rate at the Banco Nación move up from 82.50 to 83.25 pesos ahead of the 65 percent surcharges.

“Today we have a very high exchange rate gap. But there is also a circumstan­ce in which there is a trade surplus, there are no foreign debt payments, and despite what is said there are 41 billion dollars of reserves, of which 12 billion are embedded deposits. And there are capital controls,” said Guzmán.

“There are problems, without a doubt, the gap is a problem, but the reserves are reaching [it],” he said, arguing the Central Bank’s dwindling stockpile was sufficient.

The price of the blue dollar, said the minister, is “less important than the cash with liquidatio­n” price, a reference to the so-called ‘CCL’ (contado

con liquidació­n) and, by extension, the ‘MEP’ (mercado electrónic­o de pagos) rates based on bond and share transactio­ns, both encouraged in order to provide non-official alternativ­es to the blue – the CCL fell almost seven percent yesterday to 168.83 pesos and the MEP almost five percent to 155.17 pesos.

While admitting that the country had a “serious problem” with its fiscal deficit because of the coronaviru­s pandemic and its accompanyi­ng lockdown, the minister argued that “signs of recuperati­on” were evident in the economy.

He also acknowledg­ed that currency devaluatio­n expectatio­ns hurt the economy, but said exchange stabilisat­ion could not be achieved “from one day to the other.”

Guzmán’s comments come just days after President Alberto Fernández declared there would be no devaluatio­n in the coming weeks.

ECONOMIC ACTIVITY DOWN 11.8% IN AUGUST

Emphasisin­g the extent of the challenges facing Argentina, the INDEC national statistics bureau reported Thursday that economic activity slumped by 11.6 percent in August year-on-year.

Data indicated that activity rose just 1.1 percent compared to July, despite the lifting of some coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

INDEC reported that in the first eight months of the year, economic activity has fallen by 12.5 percent compared to the same period the previous year.

The year-on-year drop, however, was an improvemen­t of dramatic contractio­ns registered in July (down 13.1 percent), June (down 11.7 percent), May (down 20.1 percent) and April (down 25.5 percent)

INDEC said in its report that government “authorisat­ions that allowed activity to resume in some sectors, to a greater or lesser degree, are beginning to be seen.”

With the exception of financial services (up 4.1 percent), all other sectors witnessed falls in August, with the largest in hotels and restaurant­s (down 56 percent).

In recession since 2018, Argentina’s GDP contracted by 2.5 percent last year. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) forecasts a fall of 11.8 percent in 2020 with a recovery of 4.9 percent in 2021.

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