It is by pure coincidence that I spent the last ten days in
Argentina while the country sped to one of its periodic disastrous economic crises.
The purpose of this post is simply to
share some of my impressions. I do not claim that they are necessarily right because
some of them are clearly out of my area of expertise.
I knew that the economic situation had deteriorated, and I
read with some surprise that Alberto Fernandez won hands down against Mauricio Macri
in a mock elections but, like many foreigners, I did not even understand what
that mock election was. In the English-language press it was dubbed a “primary”
and while, in some formal ways, it was indeed a primary, fundamentally it was
something else, as I will explain below
The first thing to realize is that everything that in the
last month or so could go wrong did. So let’s start with the mock election, PASO
by the Spanish language acronym. It was supposed to be a primary where, on the
same day, voters would choose a candidate, among several from their own party,
who should run in the presidential election.
More or less like Democrats in the US choosing among various Democratic
candidates, and Republicans likewise among various Republicans. But in this
year’s PASO each party had only one candidate. There was thus no inter-party choice
at all. The vote became a giant election poll. The fact that almost 50% of
voters, under the conditions of obligatory vote valid for both the PASO and the
general election, decided to vote in the Fernandez “primary” (16% more than the number voting in the Macri “primary”)
thus indicated a clear intent of vote in the real election. 16 percentage points
seems like an unbridgeable gap for Macri.
Thus the result of this weird mock election transformed the
sitting president into a lame duck president with four months yet to go before the presumed new president takes over (two
months until the election, and then two months before the formal transfer of
power). The all but certainty of Fernandez’ win spooked foreign investors (Alberto is running on a ticket with Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, the former president and widow of Nestor Kirchner) and
Argentina’s debt, in the midst of an IMF negotiation, was downgraded. It also produced the first signs
of a run on the peso.
The political situation could not have been worse for
economic stability. Macri maintains the hope of a remontada, or winning
from behind, and his economic policy is, I suppose, now predicated on that political
calculation. Fernandez is seen as a future president, but at this time, he has
no economic power whatsoever. Clearly, the situation would have been better if Fernandez
could become immediately the new president, or if PASO had not taken place. As
it is, the most destabilizing political situation is afoot.
One adds to that economics. With the devaluation of the peso
(during the ten days that I was there, the peso went from 56 to a dollar to 62, that is devalued by some 10%
in ten days), a dollarized economy like Argentina is immediately exposed to increased
inflation. It is now running at 50% annually, but is likely to accelerate. In a
country where all economic decisions are dollarized, every increase in the
value of the dollar implies higher peso prices. The loss in peso’s value makes
the dollar ever more attractive as the store of value, and the expectation of
further inflation and peso devaluation exacerbates the demand for the dollar
and the flight of capital abroad.
Time becomes, like in all high inflations, crucially valuable.
A peso received tomorrow is not of the same value as the peso received today.
Some stores are thus accepting only cash payments or debit cards; not credit
cards. In my experience, this is still an exception, but it could soon become
more widespread.
At the same time, the economy is contracting at an annual
rate of about 2% which obviously means lower incomes and higher unemployment. Poverty
is estimated at almost 40% of the population. Real earnings of people paid in
pesos will decline (as nominal peso incomes fail to catch up with inflation)
and their incomes in dollars will decrease even further. In such conditions,
the Church has just asked the president to declare a food emergency and to presumably
freeze prices of food. Rationing cannot then be far behind.
We thus get to a situation of an infernal cycle where everybody
tries to save themselves by converting all pesos into dollars which only gives
an additional incentive to those who have not yet converted all their pesos to
do it as promptly as possible.
I was in Greece where the euro withdrawals were limited. I
saw some signs of panic but I think that the Argentine short-term situation
is worse. The euro continued to be the store of value and the unit of
transaction; the problem was the shortage of the euros like the shortage of the
dollars in Argentina, but there was (obviously) no danger of hyperinflation.
To stop this infernal cycle which is essentially driven by politics
and lack of confidence one needs massive inflows of foreign exchange. The fear
is voiced at times in Buenos Aires that even that might not help if most of
that inflow is immediately sent abroad. But clearly there must be such a substantial
inflow that would be sufficient to stop speculation and capital flight and reintroduce
some stability. Argentina seems to me to be in a situation where the short-term
dominates all other concerns. It is like a patient that is bleeding, and the
role of the doctors is not to ask whether the patient has health insurance or
not but to rush him to the emergency room. All other considerations about the
rescheduling of the debt and the rest can, I think, take place only when a modicum
of stability is reintroduced.
The role of the IMF is crucial. It lent enormous amounts of money to Greece. There is no reason why Latin America should be treated differently than Europe.
The role of the IMF is crucial. It lent enormous amounts of money to Greece. There is no reason why Latin America should be treated differently than Europe.