The
IMF's delinquent pupil since last month's upheaval,
Argentina has broken with
market orthodoxy and adopted a radical alternative.
Tom Gill
"For many years in Argentina," declared
Eduardo Duhalde as he assumed the presidency on January
1, "they have made us believe that amid this
new world order, there is only one possible economic
model. This is a complete falsehood."
Argentinians, who once lived in a country as rich
as France, will be hoping he is right. These days,
after two-and-half-decades of IMF-backed free-market
reforms, more than 40% of the 38m population live
below the poverty line and 100 children die daily
from hunger and disease. As a leading member of the
Peronist party, which under Carlos Menem brought Argentina
to the edge of the abyss, Duhalde might seem an unlikely
candidate to challenge the status quo. But in recent
years, he has taken increasingly critical stance towards
neo-liberal policies.
Now Duhalde is putting his views into practice. He
plans to freeze the prices charged by the foreign-owned
electricity, gas and telephone companies and tax the
exports of foreign-owned oil companies. And to protect
the impoverished middle class from a 40% devaluation,
he is guaranteeing that dollar loans under $100,000
will be converted into pesos at the rate of one to
one, transferring a burden of around $5bn from borrowers
to the bank. Duhalde is also promising public money
to cut the jobless queues and a dual exchange rate
to protect local industry "Plunder" is how
Spanish-owned Repsol-YPF, which controls Argentina's
largest oil company, describes these policies. In
truth, plunder describes the practice of foreign investors
in Argentina for the best part of three decades. Under
the generals in the late 70s and early 80s, they took
part in a frenzy of financial speculation and national
asset stripping. Subsidiaries of western multinationals
borrowed billions from western banks – debts
which were then conveniently nationalised by a compliant
government. Partly as a result, when the generals
had returned to barracks in 1984, the public debt
had risen to $46bn from $7.8bn nine years earlier.
Under Menem - whose 1991 peso-dollar convertibility
plan helped stamp out hyperinflation, but effectively
handed control of the government debt to foreign creditor
banks - the foreign debt burden was pushed ever higher,
from $65bn in 1991 to $160.2bn in 2000.
Foreign multinationals made billions from an accompanying
privatization programme and repatriated profits on
a huge scale. Ordinary Argentinians Saw welfare slashed
and wages fall from 30% of national income in 1989
to 18% five years later. By 1998, the inward investment
boom that drove five years of strong
Economic growth had turned to capital flight. The
government had run out of state companies to sell,
the 1997 east Asian financial crisis dampened investors'
appetites for all "emerging markets" and
the appreciation of the dollar priced Argentinian
goods out of world markets. The country plunged into
recession.
A string of austerity plans only aggravated the crisis.
In December the government's raid on Argentinian pension
funds and imposition of limits on bank withdrawals
crowned the pillage. A pauperised middle class joined
the poor in revolt on the streets. A total of nine
IMF stabilization programmes since 1983 ended up with
the largest sovereign debt default in history. The
fall of the IMF's star pupil - coming after Mexico's
1995 financial crisis, the east Asian meltdown and
the reintroduction of capital controls in Malaysia
- has forced some free-market thinkers to admit the
obvious: that austerity plans during deflationary
periods are disastrous; that abolishing capital controls
creates instability; and that bond markets are no
more reliable than private banks at providing governments
with long-term financing.
Yet the US and Europe are demanding that Argentina
"honours its international commitments".
The IMF is in the country pressing these demands.
Duhalde appears in no hurry to oblige, but he has
little room for manoeuvre. While devaluation of the
peso will boost exports, major industrial countries
are in recession and the US is turning to selective
protectionism. A strong export drive would also mean
more austerity for a population which has already
signalled it has had enough.
Duhalde could do worse than seek inspiration from
his own political movement's past. General Juan Peron's
economic model of the 1940s, a sort Of authoritarian
Keynesianism, centred on producing for the local market.
Driven by state-led industrialisation, it was supported
by rising . Purchasing power of workers who, organised
in powerful trade unions, pushed up wages and won
higher benefits and welfare. A revival of such policies
would be strongly opposed by the US and Europe, which
are intent on expanding free trade on the terms most
advantageous to multinationals. But if a more protectionist
and domestic-orientated growth policy were to bring
a sustainable recovery, Argentina's approach could
gain popular appeal elsewhere. It is time for a new
economic model and Argentina could help to show the
way.
Tom Gill is a freelance journalist who has lived and
worked in Argentina
gill_tom@yahoo.co.uk
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CRISIS
January 15, 2002.
[Source: The Guardian January 15, 2002]
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