Posted on 01/28/2014 4:41:46 PM PST by robowombat
Monday, 27 January 2014 17:45 Argentina's Economy Is Cratering, Again Written by Bob Adelmann
While Wall Street declined by three percent over global growth concerns last week, few were noting or even interested in the 11-percent decline in the Merval, Argentinas stock market index. It hit a high of 5,970 on Tuesday, January 21, the day before the Argentina government devalued its currency. It closed at 5,337 on Monday. The peso itself has been in decline far longer, having lost nearly 35 percent of its value against the dollar over the last 12 months.
In an address to her country the day after the devaluation, Argentinas President Cristina Fernandez, in a brilliant display of economic ignorance and hubris, announced her solution to the problem: more government spending. This time, she announced a 600-peso ($84) monthly stipend to students, to be paid for with more printing-press money.
This was entirely predictable: Efforts were made to grow Argentina's economy through deficits, and inflation of the currency rose as the peso lost value, reaching 28 percent last year. As citizens tried to preserve what little purchasing power they had left, Fernandez clamped down with more than 30 different stifling capital controls. This would force those with capital to suffer the brunt of the inflation. Those controls included:
Increased taxes on credit card purchases
Limits on online purchases of products made abroad
Taxes on vacations taken outside the country
Limits on purchases of foreign currencies
Confiscating private pension plans, converting them into pesos, and then adding them to the countrys social security fund
Prohibiting foreign companies with a local presence from sending their profits back home
Surcharges on airline tickets to foreign destinations
Limits on ATM withdrawals, and only in pesos, not dollars.
The results were also predictable. Citizens who exited the country packed whatever dollars they had into the bottom of suitcases; others put them in safe deposit boxes or hid them under their mattresses. When local police went on strike for higher wages, riots broke out. That was followed by looting. Shop owners were traumatized. Dominga Kanaza, the owner of a corner grocery in downtown Buenos Aires, refused to open the shutters on her store, telling reporters, It was scary, and the worst situation she had seen since similar riots occurred during Argentinas economic collapse and $95 billion default back in 2001.
Soybean farmers began to hoard their harvests rather than bringing them to market, predicting that soy would retain its value better than the peso.
When Vale, the worlds second largest mining company in the world, cancelled plans to invest $6 billion (American dollars) in a new potash mine in Argentina, things got rough. The company did the math and decided that the gap between Argentinas official and black-market exchange rates would force it to invest real dollars into a project that would only pay back pesos in profits. Argentinas chief enforcer, Interior Secretary Guillermo Moreno, demanded a meeting with Vale company officials at which he threatened them with jail unless the agreement was reinstated.
The last time such measures were instituted, they were called colloquially corralito, meaning that the free markets operations were corralled or limited so that the government could work its will on it and on the citizens involved in it. This occurred the last time Argentina tried to resist the inevitable effects of making promises it couldnt keep and then paying for them with phony money. The corralito in 2001 froze bank accounts while forbidding the withdrawal of dollars and only allowing minor withdrawals of pesos. This was instrumental in collapsing the economy.
The economy began to revive when the corralito was lifted by Roberto Lavagna, who served as Argentinas minister of economy and production from 2002 to 2005. As it was lifted, the value of the peso stabilized, trade surpluses began to reflect a growing economy, and unemployment began to decline. The poverty rate dropped, and for a period of time Argentinas economy thrived.
But with the election of former President Nestor Kirchners widow, Cristina, in 2007, government promises abounded, with public works programs announced that were promised to offset the impact of the worldwide Great Recession. That was the beginning of the end of the Lavagna resurgence and the beginning of the new corallito.
Unless and until Argentina and its citizens learn from history, it will be forced, once again, to enjoy the fruits of government intervention in the free market, running the risk of turning todays corrallito into a corralón a big corral of even more draconian measures, setting the stage for yet another Argentinian crisis that could equal or exceed that of 1998 through 2001.
A graduate of Cornell University and a former investment advisor, Bob is a regular contributor to The New American magazine and blogs frequently at www.LightFromTheRight.com, primarily on economics and politics. He can be reached at badelmann@thenewamerican.com.
We’re on our way.
Let the Argentines rot in their self-imposed Marxist economic Hell.
Meanwhile, right across the border, Chile is going to do okay. Why? Because Chile is not a fan of the Socialist ideas that brought Argentina down in 1998-2001 and threatens to happen again now....
This news will somehow be interpreted as good and begin a 5% rally in the S&P.
There comes a point when a country collectively wants to live off the wealth that it built up rather than continue to create new wealth. The moochers start taking more and more and mortgage the future of the country and you end up with something like Argentina. Piss poor, angry, resentful of anyone who makes money by being productive and wanting to sit on their asses, living the good life off someone else’s dime. Its a soul sickness, a moral crisis, when people think that someone else should pay for their lifestyle.
I wonder where Hillary would find herself in disagreement with Cristina Fernandez on economic policy.
inevitable, with socialists in charge
BLUF - Argentina has spent the last 60 plus years developing new ways to commit economic suicide, much like our Republic is beginning to do.
If you can find an old enough encyclopedia, say one about 100 years old, you will discover that Argentina’s economy was better than the US’s of that era. Look at the public buildings of the early 20th Century - they rivaled, in size and architectural details, their counterparts in Europe. Claiming Argentina citizenship was equal to claiming American citizenship.
But, starting no later than with Peron, Argentina began a sixty year experiment with socialism in multiple forms (Nazi through Stalinist) and it became increasingly unpopular to have wealth not matter how you used it.
Reading this article gives us a view through a glass darkly of what our Republic will be in 60 years if our current trajectory isn’t substantially altered.
Argentines should own resources and do manufacturing in Argentina—not foreign concerns that have been using big government to outlaw domestic competition there and buy up the whole country.
“..and the money kept rolling out...”
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