Hey all,
It's great to see that my Salon article made its way into this conversation, and I have to say, I'm impressed--given the tone of so many of the discussions on this forum, I was expecting a much more virulently negative response.
I know the article is hardly the central topic of this thread, but I did just want to respond to two criticisms, one of which I think is unfair and the other of which just requires a bit of clarification. I'll start with the clarification:
gsi16386 said:
I respectfully thank you for the read, however most of their stats are comparing today to 2003 when the crisis had just ended, so of course numbers will be skewed. And even then I still don't agree with the article because it's just downright wrong. Salon.com is also a liberal tabloid and are about as unbiased as Sean Hannity.
I actually had quite a few more statistics but my editor cut them out. I'd encourage you to head over to
the World Bank's online database (no INDEC here!) and compare nearly any economic indicator from around 1990 through 2009. The results are striking: Unemployment is much lower now than in the mid-90s, at the height of the country's so-called "miracle." So is income inequality, which has returned to its pre-90s level. When it comes to the middle and working classes, things aren't just much better than they were during or right after the crisis, they're actually much better than they were throughout the 90s (which, despite the fawning international press coverage, were themselves a time of crisis for the less well-to-do in this country).
Now the criticism that I'd like to rebut:
jb5 said:
The Salon article is interesting but not written by someone with an understanding of economics.
It's hard to ignore that the K's did a lot to help the poor and bring the prosperity to a middle class that is apparent to the eye here in BA--full restaurants, lots of folks with credit cards, a booming Starbucks generation. But the issue is that what they did to bring this about is not sustainable.
Thus the desperate moves just days after the election. Can a middle class grow here without foreign investment? Can a real estate market based on pesos not fall? Can AR not seriously devalue the peso when Brazil is seriously devaluing the Real? Can the government keep on spending the way they have been with zero access to international debt markets?
It all was never sustainable. Kind of like Obama's stabs at stimulus. Eventually reality must be dealt with.
I'll admit that I'm not an economist. But I studied history and am currently pursuing a masters in social sciences here in BA, I've taken quite a few classes in economic history and international political economy, and I read a lot and attend as many academic events as I can here. The issue is not that I don't "understand" what orthodox economics suggests ought to happen in Argentina--it's that I don't agree with it. (And also that Salon.com has a low tolerance for econ wonkery.) In fact, I think critics who harp on the "sustainability" of Argentina's growth are begging the question; they're almost always measuring "sustainability" according to metrics obviously biased toward orthodox thinking (like foreign investment, which the US press loves to equate with stability, when in fact the development literature suggests that it's value-neutral, at best), so a heterodox approach is by the very terms of the premise guaranteed to fail the test. (I'm not the only one who believes this; check out these posts from Paul Krugman--whatever your opinion of him, I'm pretty sure he understands the economics well enough:
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/06/23/dont-cry-for-argentina/,
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/24/unacceptable-success/)
It's true--as I've heard many times from Argentine economists--that the Kirchners have by no means single- (or double-
) handedly fixed the long-standing structural problems in Argentina's economy. But what are the biggest ones I usually hear cited? A skewed, inefficient, and needlessly regressive tax structure. An over-reliance on commodity exports. A weak domestic manufacturing base. Whatever you think about the Kirchners, it's impossible to seriously study Argentine history and not come to the conclusion that the knee-jerk neoliberalism that dominated the country from 1976 through 2003 (and was celebrated throughout by the West) has made all three of these problems vastly worse.
Argentine growth will surely slow next year. And the peso will need to be devalued. But if slowing growth and challenges responding to a strong dollar are the standard for failure, then Brazil and Chile (and China, and basically anyone else still growing strongly right now) are heading for it too.
I don't love the Kirchners by any stretch. They've done quite a lot of things that deserve to be criticized. But by any reasonable standard they've also achieved remarkable successes, one of which includes restoring a middle class decimated not just by the crisis but by the neoliberal 90s as well. The refusal of so much of the U.S. press (and so many people on this forum) to acknowledge this leads me to believe that the very way in which our papers cover the news doesn't leave much room for those who challenge the status quo.
If you'd like to push me on these points individually, but fairly, feel free to do it on my blog,
comoelpulpo.wordpress.com. (As those crazy enough to have read this far have probably figured out, I love this stuff.)
-Paul