Showing posts with label Autocracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Autocracy. Show all posts

Saturday, 26 March 2016

THE NEW YORK TIMES CRITICAL VIEW ON ARGENTINE'S NEWLY ELECTED PRESIDENT MACRI





During his trip to Argentina this week, President Obama is unlikely to visit Milagro Sala. A prominent social activist in the northwestern province of Jujuy, Ms. Sala was arrested in January at the behest of Gov. Gerardo Morales, a political ally of the country’s new president, Mauricio Macri.
There has been international outrage over her detention; Pope Francis, the United Nations and Amnesty International have expressed concern. Not the White House: When announcing Mr. Obama’s visit, it thanked Mr. Macri for “his contributions to the defense of human rights in the region.”
Mr. Obama’s historic trip to Cuba has all the pageantry of a farewell to the Cold War in Latin America. His visit to Havana will serve as a symbolic climax in the normalization of American relations with Cuba’s Communist government. But his excursion to Argentina has a very different resonance.
Shortly before Mr. Obama’s arrival in Buenos Aires, his administration announced the declassification of United States government documents relating to Argentina’s 1976-83 military dictatorship. Yet the visit is not about the current state of human rights, but about free trade and hemispheric security.
An acknowledgment of the malign role the United States played in the early years of the dictatorship is welcome, if overdue. But to ignore the red flags on human rights raised by the recent actions of Argentina’s new ruling party is a worrying reminder of that legacy. For Mr. Macri, Mr. Obama’s visit is already an endorsement.



Photo

Protesters last month demanded the release of the prominent social activist Milagro Sala, who was arrested in January. CreditNatacha Pisarenko/Associated Press

The arrest of Ms. Sala illustrates the Argentine government’s new hard-line approach. Her organization played an important role in providing for socially excluded groupsoffering them housing, jobs and education. Ms. Sala was detained for leading a protest of cooperative workers, the unemployed and indigenous people in one of the country’s poorest provinces. Later, she was accused of embezzling public funds. That judicial investigation must run its course, but due process demands that she should not be imprisoned in the meantime.
This arbitrary detention comes amid a rash of measures taken by the Macri administration that have weakened the rule of law on the pretext of security, economic freedom and the war on drugs. In January, within weeks of taking office, Mr. Macri declared an emergency that allowed military forces to shoot down unidentified planes suspected of drug trafficking.
In effect, the president had decreed a de facto death penalty without trial. This policy has been criticized as an example of the “narcotización” of public safety. It is counter to the core principles of Argentina’s post-dictatorship reforms that prohibit military intervention in domestic security.
Soon after Mr. Macri’s inauguration, the highest court in the capital, Buenos Aires, ruled that police officers could demand identification from citizens there without probable cause, a ruling that gives a green light to harassment based on prejudice. In an equally troubling move, the federal government recently unveiled a new protocol for policing protests that gives the authorities more power to put down and criminalize demonstrations; this in a country where people value the right of free assembly and often take to the streets to fight for their rights.
Argentina’s economic and political meltdown in 2001 conclusively demonstrated that the free market approach of the 1990s had not made life better for ordinary people. Yet, Mr. Macri and his team are reviving failed policies of the past. With commodity prices in decline, they want to attract foreign investment by cutting their way to competitiveness: reducing public spending and shrinking government.
At the same time, the administration has lifted controls on currency exchange, boosting inflation. Some analysts predict that it will exceed the official target for 2016 of 20 to 25 percent.



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Despite campaign vows to strengthen democratic institutions, President Macri is governing in the other direction. In December, he tried to appoint two new Supreme Court justices by fiat, bypassing Senate approval. Facing an outcry, the president backpedaled and sentthe nominations to the Senate.
In another highhanded move, Mr. Macri used executive orders to alter a cornerstone of media law that, while poorly enforced by the previous administration, had amplified freedom of expression by bolstering anti-monopoly regulations. Such a presidential intervention would be appalling in any circumstances, but in the context of Argentina’s political polarization and other repressive measures is cause for alarm.
The risk of militarizing public order, the weakening of institutional restraints on executive power, the criminalization of protest and a fixation on promoting free-market orthodoxies — none of this has good echoes in Latin America. The United States supported many of the region’s dictators in the 1970s and ’80s so that they would serve as local guarantors of free trade and security against Communism.
Only after the inauguration in 1977 of President Jimmy Carter did the United States try to curb the continent’s repressive forces. Important as this was, it could not compensate for the decades when the United States, while claiming to defend democracy, had aided Latin America’s dictators.
Mr. Obama surely wants to put that past behind him. But during his administration, the United States has encouraged the destabilization of democracy in Honduras and Haiti, presumably in hopes that more favorable commercial partners or allies in the war on drugs would take over.
The United States’ decision to declassify more documents relating to Argentina’s dictatorship is an important step that could enable further judicial investigations of crimes against humanity. But Mr. Obama should not now endorse state violence and ideological bigotry as acceptable side effects of the United States’ larger goals of promoting free markets and security cooperation.

ARGENTINA - ON THE ROAD TO THE BAD OLD DAYS
A presidential visit to Argentina that neglects to notice how Mr. Macri’s government is undermining human rights and democratic institutions — and instead pours empty praise on his policies — will rightly be read as a return to the bad old days.

Sunday, 13 March 2016

THE ARGENTINE ELECTION DILEMMA




ARGENTINA REVISITED –THREE MONTH ON

ARGENTINA – a new dictator is born. Actually no, he has just been elected. – Or, was he? – It appears like the newly elected MAURICIO MACRI is the most fascist and dictatorial President since the VIDELA military era. 

Unlike VIDELA, MACRI hasn’t murdered people (yet); not by traditional weapons, but may do so by economic strangulation – the weapon of choice of neoliberalism.

At a young age, MACRI, now a multi-billionaire has had dealings with DONALD TRUMP, the Republican front runner for the US Presidency. That, of course, doesn’t make him a ‘bad guy’. But it does characterize him as someone who would rather turn favors to the rich than to the needy. That should rather be telling for the ARGENTINIANS, who elected him – or did they?

REPRESSION BACK ON TRACK

Since day one, MAURICIO MACRI has started repressive socio-economic measures – when he let the peso float on the day of his inauguration on 10 December 2015. It devalued by about 50%, then recovered somewhat. The bottom line is, though, the people at large will suffer purchasing power losses, so that dollar investments may flood the country – as he says and hopes – to privatize once more ARGENTINA’S economy to foreign investors. It’s all so reminiscent of the MENEM years. – And the ARGENTINIANS elected him – did they really?


At the time of writing this article at least 12,000 state employees in BUENOS AIRES were dismissed, starting the New Year with unemployment – no individual warnings; the contracts of another 62,000 government employees country-wide since then have been examined – and were since terminated. Many of them may have voted for him — really?
Millions of people took to the streets throughout the plazas of the major cities in ARGENTINA recently, demanding social justice, like freedom of expression and the right of work – and for most the respect for human rights – and defending democracy over the dictatorial rule of a right wing demagogue.



What justice? – Macri by decree decided that Supreme Court judges he appointed did not need the Senate’s approval, as the country’s Constitution prescribes. Within the first 72 hours of MACRI’S ascent to power, he issued 29 Presidential Decrees, so as to impose his program without parliamentary approval. And that’s the way he will rule, at least the first 100 days; a neo-fascist dictator par excellence.

MACRI’S other upsetting controversy was –the removal of the Presidential painting of President KIRCHNER from the walls of the Casa Rosada, the Presidential Mansion.

And why are ARGENTINIANS so upset and even outraged? – After all MACRI told them in advance what he would do when becoming President, things so outrageous, nobody probably believed him. Not unlike most Presidents who forget their campaign promises once elected – MACRI actually carries them through – and he has just started. There is a long list of measures he intends to take – all of them against the well-being of the majority of the people, but in favour of Big Business, in favour of his northern allies in WASHINGTON, those who helped him to power.

THE MEASURES MACRI ‘PROMISED’ HE WOULD CARRY OUT INCLUDE:

Negotiate with the Vulture Funds, as well as renegotiate ARGENTINA’S debt with the IMF. This is reopening a bloody scar, as the KIRCHNER Governments had successfully negotiated and agreed with 97% of the creditors to debt payments on average of about 25 cents to the dollar. Payments are being made on schedule.

Among the 3% who didn’t agree were the Vulture Funds, managed by the vulture fund billionaire PAUL SINGER. SINGER wants it all.

Having bought ARGENTINA’S debt on the cheap – very cheap – he followed ARGENTINA’S last fifteen years of recovery and accumulation of reserves and ‘bought’ a NEW YORK judge to intervene in ARGENTINA’S sovereign affairs, ordering THE SOUTH AMERICAN country to pay Mr. vulture SINGER in full.

This aberration was overruled by last year’s UN General Assembly adopting overwhelmingly a new global framework for sovereign debt restructuring, in favour of nations’ rights to seek protection from minority creditors, such as the US SINGER hedge funds, which refuse to go along with the majority in mutually agreed debt restructurings. Despite this ruling, MACRI intends to renegotiate and possibly give away some of the people’s hard-earned reserves to greedy US vulture funds. – Bravo! – And ARGENTINIANS elected him – hard to believe; did they really?

Substantially increasing gas and electricity tariffs – already started.
Repeal the Memorandum of Agreement with IRAN regarding the investigation and the Truth Commission in the case of AMIA; the car bomb attack on the Asosiacion Mutual Iraelita Argentina which caused the death of 85 people in July 1994. Prosecutor  NIESMAN, in charge of the investigation appeared dead in his apartment a few hours before he was to disclose his findings in an ARGENTINE Court. According to Wikileaks the investigation was directed by WASHINGTON.

Closing down Public TV Stations 6, 7 and 8 which had the tendency to be critical of Government politics.
Removing the Attorney General, whose function according to the Constitution is sustained as long as it is carried out according to the norms of the law – which according to all records it is. MACRI wants to replace her by one of his cronies.

Restructuring the Central Bank – replacing the current President, whom MACRI reproaches of being a KIRCHNERITE – and replacing him with one of his buddies; and this despite the fact that the Charter of the Central Bank allows removal of its President only for serious professional or ethical infractions – none of which is the case with the current President of the Central Bank.

ARGENTINE'S CLASS STRUGGLE

Increasing taxes for the lowest income earners ‘in the name of justice’.
These are just a few of the measures he announced – and people either didn’t listen, or didn’t believe him. ARGENTINIANS voted for MAURICIO MACRI – or did they? – With a slim margin of about 3% over his center-left opponent, DANIEL SCIOLI; a slim margin but enough not to justify a recount. Why would the majority of people vote for a candidate who told them in so many words that he would undo what the previous KIRCHNER Governments have done for them?

ARE ARGENTINES MASOCHISTS?

Then there are the so-called progressive ARGENTINIAN economists who argue about an ardent class struggle between the entrepreneurs who have been short-changed during the KIRCHNER years and the average working citizen. What a baloney! – What class struggle – when 80% of the people benefitted from the KIRCHNERS’ social programs and highly distributive GDP growth? – Would they vote as masochists for the neoliberal, neo-colonial multi-billionaire MAURICIO MACRI – who said he would undo many of these social gains?

ELECTION COUP – TARGET LATIN AMERICA

This would indeed be strange. Just open your eyes and the crimes of WASHINGTON’S secret hand will be revealed; the ‘invisible’ hand which once again – and again – has carried out what ARGENTINA journalist ESTELA CALLONI calls an ‘election coup’.

Comment by Geopolitical Analysis and Monitoring :

ARGENTINES elections were won because the largest ARGENTINE Media Conglobate, the CLARIN Group (The group is associated with GOLDMAN SACHS)  in association with the “WASHINGTON CONSENSUS” – Financial Institutions and leading Hedge Funds owner PAUL SINGER   funded MACRI’S presidential campaign in order to push through their eco – political agenda in ARGENTINA.

Background Information:  MACRI’S CONNECTION TO THE CLARIN GROUP

read related articles at: 





Not to forget the ones in EASTERN EUROPE and CENTRAL ASIA, called ‘Color Revolutions’, of which the most notorious one, the fascist coup in UKRAINE, has already left tens of thousands dead and denigrated millions into homelessness and hapless refugees – or in the MIDDLE EAST and NORTH AFRICA – the infamous ‘Arab Springs’ – not to forget, IRAQ, AFGHANISTAN, LIBYA, SYRIA, SOMALIA, YEMEN – all of them causing millions of deaths and social victims of wars of injustice, so-called ‘refugees’; many of the conflicts turning into endless wars against western-invented and western fabricated and spread ‘terror’.

Only time will tell what’s in store for ARGENTINA and the rest of what we proudly called the ‘free’ LATIN AMERICA – now gradually turning into what it was for most of the 20th Century – WASHINGTON’S Backyard.

Adapted by Geopolitical Analysis and Monitoring from the article originally written by Peter Koenig via Information Clearing House








Wednesday, 3 February 2016

ARGENTINA IN THE INTERNATIONAL SPOTLIGHT FOR SHIFT TOWARDS AUTOCRACY



ARGENTINA’S UNCERTAIN PROSPECTS - A COUNTRY RUN PER DECREE

MAURICIO MACRI’S election as ARGENTINA’S president brought to an end 12 years of government led by NÉSTOR and CRISTINA FERNÁNDEZ KIRCHNER. MACRI’S administration inherits a delicate economy. If he is not careful, ARGENTINA could face a balance-of-payments crisis, owing to deteriorating external conditions and macroeconomic mismanagement, especially since 2011.

SOME ASPECTS OF ARGENTINA’S ECONOMIC SITUATION, HOWEVER, ARE HIGHLY DESIRABLE – NOT LEAST IT’S LOW DEBT-TO-GDP RATIO

Some aspects of ARGENTINA’S economic situation, however, are highly desirable – not least it’s low debt-to-GDP ratio. As a result, MACRI’S government faces a much less daunting task than the one confronting KIRCHNER in 2003, after a decade-long experiment with WASHINGTON CONSENSUS policies (financial deregulation, trade liberalization, and privatization), together with the peso’s peg to the US dollar, ended in disaster. When KIRCHNER took office, ARGENTINA had just experienced its most severe economic crisis ever. Unemployment, inequality, poverty, and the national debt had all risen. Massive deindustrialization and deep weaknesses in its education system did not bode well for the future.

Following devaluation and default, ARGENTINA experienced a spectacular recovery. In a severely demand-constrained economy, the Kirchner government pursued policies that led to a massive reduction in unemployment, poverty, and inequality. A deep debt restructuring greatly contributed to the restoration of macroeconomic sustainability.

ARGENTINA NAVIGATED THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS WITH RELATIVE SUCCESS

In a favorable global environment, the more competitive exchange rate set the stage for reindustrialization, creating jobs for many who had been excluded from labor markets during the previous decade. As a result, from 2003 to 2008, GDP growth averaged more than 8% per year.

During FERNÁNDEZ’S presidency, the country navigated the global financial crisis with relative success. But, after 2011, instead of carefully designing macro and micro policies to favor a consistent increase in supply and demand, most policies fostered sustaining aggregate demand in a context that was no longer purely KEYNESIAN.

Demand grew, but supply didn’t keep up. Some sectors (particularly energy) experienced bottlenecks, causing inflation to accelerate. (Given political intervention in the National Institute of Statistics, official reports are not credible; but all estimates suggest that before the recent devaluation, inflation exceeded 20%.) As a result, the exchange rate continued appreciating, undermining ARGENTINA’S post-2003 development strategy. Exports and real activity stagnated. Exchange controls and import restrictions were imposed to fight capital flight and shore up the trade balance. Nonetheless, foreign reserves continued to fall.

ARGENTINA HAD FOLLOWED A SUCCESSFUL POLICY OF DEBT REDUCTION

(including full repayment to the International Monetary Fund, thereby increasing the government’s policymaking autonomy). But the fiscal surplus during NESTOR KIRCHNER’S presidency turned into a sizable deficit under FERNÁNDEZ. Her leadership brought about significant improvements in the lives of many, a more egalitarian income distribution, an economy close to full employment, and a much lower debt-to-GDP ratio; but the erosion in the external balance (and the even greater imbalance that would have occurred, had distortionary measures to control the imbalances not been undertaken) now threatens to reverse part of that progress.

MACRI’S task is to address the external and fiscal imbalances and reduce inflation, without undoing what has been achieved. In its first weeks, his government eliminated or reduced taxes on commodity exports and abolished exchange controls, resulting in a de facto devaluation of around 35% against the dollar.



Any course of action (including doing nothing) in the current context is risky. Several threats stand out: an acceleration of inflation; a worsening of the trade position (and, even more worrisome, further erosion of already dwindling foreign-currency reserves); and a marked increase in inequality. Responses to inflation or to declining reserves could, in turn, lead to the worst of all possible worlds: stagflation – a cooling economy in which inflation is not fully contained.

There are four key uncertainties: the pass-through to consumer prices of the removal of export taxes and exchange controls; the effect of this de facto devaluation on exports and imports; foreign investors’ response to the new environment; and access to “bridge” finance, which depends on a settlement with holdout creditors (the so-called vulture funds).

THE IMMEDIATE WINNERS ARE AGRICULTURAL AND OTHER COMMODITY EXPORTERS, WHO WILL RECEIVE MUCH MORE FOR WHAT THEY SELL.

If the devaluation does not cause significant inflationary pressures, it will boost competitiveness without decreasing real wages.

But that seems to be wishful thinking. If higher prices for domestic goods previously subject to export taxes and higher import prices (as a result of devaluation) are passed on to consumers, real wages will fall, in which case workers are likely to demand larger pay increases, pushing up inflation. And the effect of the devaluation on consumer prices could go beyond traded goods: ARGENTINA has a long history of highly unstable relative prices, with the US dollar often the reference currency for setting prices of non-traded goods.


In the face of growing inflationary pressures, the central bank would presumably raise interest rates. If done carefully, this could dampen demand just enough to restore a semblance of macroeconomic balance. Even then, rising redundancies in non-bottleneck sectors would most likely push up the overall unemployment rate, with inflation only partly tamed, producing stagflation.

If the central bank acts too aggressively and drives the economy into recession, the poor would be disproportionately affected. An inflation-targeting regime (which the central bank has announced that it intends to establish) would make this outcome more likely.

INFLUX OF FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT IMMINENT? HARDLY - IF CORRUPTION IS NOT CURBED IN

Optimists believe the new policy regime will lead to an influx of foreign direct investment, and that a “fair” resolution to the vultures’ claims will clear the way for a bridge loan to cover any financing gap. Moreover, the weaker exchange rate, combined with pent-up sales of commodities waiting for the one-time devaluation, will suffice to meet any foreign-currency needs.

Pessimists, seeing a global slowdown and a recession in neighboring BRAZIL, worry that there will need to be further devaluations, especially given significant pass-through to consumer prices, and that this – or even the expectation of it – may lead some exporters to delay shipments. They also worry about a surge of pent-up demand for imports, once import restrictions are fully lifted.

The pessimists also doubt that any mutually acceptable settlement of the debt-holdout problem can be found, putting a bridge loan out of reach. After all, any settlement would have to be ratified by ARGENTINA’S parliament, which, as Finance Minister ALFONSO PRAT-GAY recently reinforced, is unlikely to agree to an offer that includes the high punitive interest rate that US federal judge THOMAS GRIESA ruled the country should pay – and rightly so.

The government’s initial actions are worrisome: In particular, the permanent cut in export taxes is a large transfer to the wealthy, at great cost to ordinary workers. Whatever the efficiency benefits, the distributive consequences and development implications cannot be ignored.

Yet MACRI’S early economic policies seem to rely on several controversial assumptions about how the devaluation will affect consumer prices and how investment will respond to more market-driven policies. If those assumptions founder, the government will need to react fast, intervening to avoid the possible recessionary effects or increases in inequality and poverty – or else the process of inclusive development will be severely harmed.

Written by Nobel Prize winner JOSEPH E. STIGLITZ and MARTIN GUZMAN via

Project-Syndicate Org.

Sunday, 17 January 2016

NEOLIBERALISM RESURGENT IN ARGENTINA




BLEAK FUTURE FOR ARGENTINA ?

Executive Summary:
  • Marci’s artificial crisis in the making
  • Why promote a huge depreciation of the currency with no clear external crisis on the horizon?
  • Objective: To weakening the working classes bargaining power
  • ARGENTINE'S political immaturity – always blaming the previous governments for negative trends
  •  What’s in store? Autocracy & Corporatocracy?
  • Marci’s strategy for re-election campaign in 2019
  • Marci’s reorientation of the economy towards primary-goods production and strengthening the role of finance, has been the strategy of ARGENTINE’S elites since the last military dictatorship
  • Resurrection of the monsters of the past?
  • The baby equation 

The election of businessman MAURICIO MACRI  to the presidency in ARGENTINA signals a rightward turn in the country and, perhaps, in SOUTH AMERICA more generally. MACRI, founder of the far right-wing party Compromiso para el cambio (Commitment to Change) party, defeated BUENOS AIRES province governor DANIEL SCIOLI (the Peronist party candidate) in November’s runoff election, by less than 3% of the vote.
MACRI is the wealthy scion of an ITALIAN immigrant family that made its money on the basis of government contracts!!

He went on to work for the family business and later, defying his father’s wishes, became president of the popular professional soccer club BOCA JUNIORS. In 2003, he won election as mayor of the capital city of BUENOS AIRES — the springboard for his eventual election to the presidency.

Background Information:


This is a momentous change in ARGENTINA’S history, since it is the first time that a right-wing party has won the presidency by electoral means. In the past, conservatives had only gained power through military coups or by disguising neoliberal policies under more progressive electoral promises and the mantle of a left-of-center party—as in CARLOS MENEM’S Peronist government in the 1990s.

WHAT’S IN STORE? AUTOCRACY & CORPORATOCRACY ?

MACRI’S economic team includes among its most prominent members ALFONSO PRAT-GAY, an ex-president of the country’s Central Bank who also worked for JPMorgan Chase. FEDERICO STURZENEGGER, secretary of economic policy in the Economics Ministry under infamous finance minister DOMINGO CAVALLO—author of the main economic policies of the 1990s— has been appointed the New Central Bank president.

In other words, the economic team clearly signals a return to the market-friendly policies of the 1990s. This is also true on the foreign policy front, were MACRI has already announced that he intends to use the so-called “democratic clause” of the COMMON MARKET OF THE SOUTH (MERCOSUR), the regional trade agreement, to exclude VENEZUELA for alleged violations of democratic norms. (MACRI has backed off that plan since the victory of the right-wing coalition in Venezuela’s recent parliamentary elections.) He has also signaled a closer alignment with the UNITED STATES.

The economic program of the new administration is quite clear, even though MACRI tried to hide his economic advisors before the election, to reduce the impact of their unpopular views at the polls. They will unify the foreign exchange market, in which there is currently a large gap between the official and black-market exchange rates. This implies a “maxi-devaluation” of the peso, from around nine to about 15 pesos to the dollar (assuming that the current black market level is their desired nominal exchange rate). The effects of a depreciation of this magnitude will be massive.

In contrast to previous devaluations—most recently in 2002, after more than ten years of a fixed one-to-one peso-to-dollar exchange rate under CAVALLO’S so-called “Convertibility Plan”—this one is not caused by an external crisis. 

While it is true that ARGENTINA’S current account balance is negative, and that its reserves are relatively low, there is no significant danger that ARGENTINA will default on its external debt now.

ARTIFICIAL CRISIS - STORM CLOUDS LOOMING OVER ARGENTINA

The current account deficit is not big, by historical standards or in comparison to other countries in the region, and international reserves can cover the country’s immediate obligations. Besides, under current conditions, with low international interest rates, it would be relatively easy to attract capital flows with higher interest rates, and borrow in international markets. (That would certainly be easier if ARGENTINA could finalize an agreement with the so-called “vulture funds,” the holdout bondholders that did not agree to the rescheduling of debt after the last default.) 


And, if anything, MACRI’S(unnecessary) promise to give in to all the vulture funds
demands and rapprochement with the UNITED STATES and International Monetary Fund (IMF) would resolve any short-run problems in financing the current account deficit.

WHY PROMOTE A HUGE DEPRECIATION OF THE CURRENCY WITH NO CLEAR EXTERNAL CRISIS ON THE HORIZON?

The question, then, is why the MACRI government would promote a huge depreciation of the currency with no clear external crisis on the horizon. The notion that the depreciation would solve the current account deficits is fraught with problems. Not only is the external situation not dire—so depreciation would be a “solution” to a non-existent problem—but there is also no evidence that exports will boom after a depreciation. Exports respond more to the growth of the global economy than to a change in relative prices. So for example, CHINA will not demand significantly more soybeans from ARGENTINA, as a result of lower prices, if the CHINESE economy is not growing faster.

Actually, the only significant way in which the depreciation will reduce the external problems of ARGENTINA is by causing a recession. Depreciations tend to reduce real wages, since the increase in the price of imported goods leads to inflation, which is not fully recovered by workers. As a result, consumption declines, with a negative impact on economic growth. MACRI and his economic team have been very explicit about the need for a huge devaluation and the closing of the gap between the official and the black-market (or “blue,” as it is known in ARGENTINA) exchange rate. This has already triggered an inflationary surge, as noted by various international renowned economists.

OBJECTIVE: TO WEAKENING THE WORKING CLASSES BARGAINING POWER?

The reason for the devaluation is precisely to cause inflation and a recession, both of which would weaken working-class bargaining power and, as a result, lead to lower real wages. And that is the ultimate goal of the new MACRI administration. He has explicitly said so, in one of the videos that his campaign tried to suppress.

The video shows him suggesting that the way out of the problems of the 1990s—when devaluation was not an option due to the Convertibility Plan—was to reduce real wages to increase external competitiveness. The maxi-devaluation of the peso will most likely be accompanied by a “fiscal adjustment plan” or, simply put, austerity. This would push the economy further into recession, reducing the bargaining power of workers even more.

ARGENTINE'S POLITICAL IMMATURITY – ALWAYS BLAMING THE PREVIOUS GOVERNMENT


Argentina's "Tango Politics"
one step forward two steps
back
Some skeptics suggest that MACRI cannot pursue the classic IMF economic package of devaluation and fiscal adjustment, since that would bring about both inflation and recession, a politically explosive combination. However, the administration will deflect political problems caused by the economic crisis that these policies will trigger by suggesting that both inflation and the recession are the results of the negative legacy of twelve years of “populism” under the previous two administrations.

In fact, MACRI is already doing this, with intensive media support (especially the Clarin Group), suggesting that the inflation since the announcement of the depreciation is just a correction to its true level. One can easily see how higher unemployment would be justified in the same fashion, as an adjustment to the true and sustainable level.

Background Information: 
MEDIA INFLUENCE IN ARGENTINAS POLITICAL LANDSCAPE 



MACRI GOVERNMENT WILL CAUSE A CRISIS THAT DOES NOT EXIST RIGHT NOW

In other words, the MACRI government will cause a crisis that does not exist right now—though the economic situation may be difficult and growth in the last three years has not been not high—but blame the effects of its neoliberal policies on the previous government.


Background Information: ARGENTINE'S MANCHESTER LIBERALISM 



MACRI’S STRATEGY FOR RE-ELECTION CAMPAIGN IN 2019

The idea would most likely be to weather a political storm over the next couple of years and then—after resolving the issues with the vulture funds and normalizing relations with IMF—start borrowing abroad again. That would help promote growth again in time for a re-election campaign in 2019.

THE BABY EQUATION 

And if all that does not work, in all likelihood ARGENTINA’S first lady of LEBANESE descent will become pregnant, just in time for the re-election in order to distract, with the help of the dominant MEDIA CONGLOMERATE “CLARIN GROUP”,     from the real problems the country faces.  

Growth would be also facilitated by the fact that the economy would be coming out of a crisis, with real wages considerably lower, and the working class well-disciplined.

MARCI’S REORIENTATION OF THE ECONOMY TOWARDS PRIMARY-GOODS PRODUCTION AND STRENGTHENING THE ROLE OF FINANCE, HAS BEEN THE STRATEGY OF ARGENTINE’S ELITES SINCE THE LAST MILITARY DICTATORSHIP

Also, MACRI will reduce or eliminate export taxes on grain and soybeans (known as retenciones, or “retentions”), strengthening the position of the ruling elites. 

The reorientation of the economy toward primary-goods (agricultural and mineral) production, along with a larger role for finance, has been the strategy of the ARGENTINE elites since the last military dictatorship. 

That is why there is such continuity between the economic plans of JOSÉ MARTÍNEZ DE HOZ under the military dictatorship of the late 1970s and the early 1980s, DOMINGO CAVALLO under MENEM in the 1990s, and (one should expect) ADOLFO PRAT-GAY under MACRI in the coming years.

The initial recession and cuts in retenciones would significantly reduce government revenue and most likely lead to larger fiscal deficits. Hence, austerity will actually worsen the fiscal balance, contrary to what the MACRI and his advisors suggest. The key is to remember that austerity policies are not designed to reduce fiscal deficits, even if that is offered up as a rationalization; they are a political instrument for disciplining labor.

RESURRECTION OF THE MONSTERS OF THE PAST?

In fact, the coming larger fiscal deficits will most likely be used to try to cut social welfare expenditures, which increased significantly during the administration of the outgoing president CRISTINA FERNÁNDEZ and her predecessor (and husband) NÉSTOR KIRCHNER. It would not be surprising if MACRI tries to privatize social security once again, something that MENEM accomplished in the 1990s, and which had to be reversed in the 2000s as a result of the private system’s complete failure to provide a decent retirement for seniors.



But if the MACRI administration is a throwback to the neoliberal era of MENEM, it is important to remember that the current historical context is very different. Back in the 1990s, the fall of the BERLIN Wall and the collapse of the SOVIET UNION gave the neoliberal policies of the infamous WASHINGTON CONSENSUS a status of unquestionable truth. Supposedly, ideology had vanished and history had come to an end. No alternative was politically possible. Since then, the 2008 global Great Recession has shown the world the perils of unfettered capitalism, and even if the “KEYNESIAN MOMENT” was brief and austerity policies have reasserted themselves, at least it is widely understood that the “free market” is no solution for the problems of development in a globalized economy.

ARGENTINE SOCIETY IS MORE ORGANIZED AND BETTER PREPARED TO FACE THE ONSLAUGHT OF NEOLIBERAL POLICIES THIS TIME AROUND.

The socioeconomic situation in ARGENTINA   is also very different. Back then, the economy was coming out of two bouts of hyperinflation, a whole decade of very low growth with very high unemployment levels and very low real wages, two decades of social conflict with a considerably weakening of the trade unions, several military coups, and an unresolved human-rights crisis from the last dictatorship.

Now, the economy has grown at a healthy pace over the last decade, though with slower growth over the last three years. Unemployment remains at relatively low levels, and though inflation is relatively high, real wages have still grown significantly over the decade, with a considerable reduction of inequality.

Further, not has only the reorganization of the economy strengthened the working class, but civil society has managed to bring violators of human rights to justice, and finally come to terms with the nefarious legacy of the dictatorship, something unique in the region. The new government does not control congress, and the election was close, signaling a divided country. In short, society is more organized and better prepared to face the onslaught of neoliberal policies this time around.


Article adapted by Geopolitical Analysis and Monitoring from the original article written by MATÍAS VERNENGO, who is a professor of economics at Bucknell University, USA and economic consultant for the UNITED NATIONS UNDP and ILO  via Dollars & Sense