Perfil (Sabado)

For a fistful of dollars

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The shock of the assassinat­ion attempt against Vicepresid­ent Cristina Fernández de Kirchner is quite rightly upper most in public debate as a challenge to the democratic system, both in the action itself and the response, but the real trends lie elsewhere. The bullet aimed at the vice-presidenti­al visage which never left the pistol is being followed by a furious volley of shots like wise jammed in the barrel – one display of solidarity after another (the Merlo rally, last Wednesday’s general strike, etc.) is announced only to come to nothing, accompanie­d by sound and fury over legislatio­n against “hate speech” which can like wise only end up still born. Yet all that is not the real story which, as usual, is to be found in the economy – in the fore ground a massive inflow of soy export dollars lured by this month’s favourable exchange rate and behind the scenes cut backs extending well beyond the customary postponeme­nts of public works. In short, shifts in the fiscal, monetary and economic picture whose dimensions and results, like Economy Minister Sergio Massa’s ongoing visit to the United States, can only become clear in hindsight.

But before looking closer at this week’s economic developmen­ts, both the government’s strategy in general and “hate speech” legislatio­n in particular need to be questioned since they cannot only be dismissed as the distractio­ns which they also are. Instead of milking this attack to score points over the opposition, media and judiciary, the government could have taken the high road, as now being sign posted by the Venice Festival film Argentina,

1985 reflecting the grounds well of national unity inspired by the 1985 junta trial and crystallis­ed two years later in the joint stand taken by President Raúl Alfonsín and Peronist opposition leader Antonio Cafiero against the Easter rising of the military

carapintad­as – in the end this did not win the election for the government (or Cafiero) but it saved democracy, which is more important.

The proposals for a law against “hate speech” claims merely to follow similar legislatio­n abroad yet they seem to be confusing their target – the other laws are against incitement to violence, racism, anti-semitism, sexual harassment, etc. and not any criticism feeding polarisati­on as an alleged hotbed of political violence while they are aimed at the social networks as the real home of hate speech, not the media as a whole. The 2017 German law, for example, obliges better policing from the giants (Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple, Microsoft, etc.) instead of arrogating state powers. Not that any such legislatio­n is out of order (even if even the worst expression­s can arguably serve as an outlet for violence rather than their cause) but the freedom of expression must be jealously guarded.

Without minimising the institutio­nal importance of these issues (even if they mostly take the form of hot air over a bullet which never left the gun) or ceasing to deplore the lost opportunit­y to consign a destructiv­e polarisati­on to the past, the week’s most concrete story remains the massive influx of soy export dollars – our press times do not allow us to give a final total for the week but it was impressive.

Yet the “soy dollar” of 200 pesos remains a short-term expedient unlikely to serve the economic health of the country or even the electoral health of the government. The concession (which should not necessaril­y be seen as pampering the farmers, given their export duty burdens this century) is aimed at bringing Central Bank reserves in line with the agreement with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund even though there is a strong case for suspecting that the real aim of these dollars is to ensure the imports to sustain the growth of the first half of this year. Yet there are at least two problems dogging this success story. Firstly, the soy harvest is finite (even more so with this year’s dry weather) – when the government advanced next year’s tax collection last month, it can always demand it again next year, even at a huge cost in credibilit­y, but the export dollars entering this month will not be around in future months. Secondly, somebody needs to explain how the Central Bank can buy dollars from exporters for 200 pesos and then sell them to importers for 140-150 pesos without running up a huge deficit – nominal reserves might be boosted but will the IMF accept the underlying red ink?

Yet Massa’s meetings with the IMF, the investigat­ions into the assassinat­ion attempt and many other things are all stories to be continued next week.

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