To say big money or some cabal of puppeteers isn't somehow the market is my opinion a matter of semantics. The market is not some mysterious force. It is merely the platform (forex, bonds, bank repos, etc) by which a value is determined. The local price of fish for example, could be determined by fishermen, at a fish market, who specialize in fishing at sea. To say it's some wizard in a tower makes for dull analysis. The players on the market can be large or small, individual or collective, public state or private business. Politics certainly plays a large part in regulating a country, which can by it's nature affect the availability, and consequently the price of a commodity or currency.
I agree. The price of fish, or the dollar, can only be temporarily controlled by a government that can afford to impose a price and support that price financially and legally.
Obviously, the Argentine government has tried again and again to enforce a particular number, and consistently fails. It does not have the deep pockets, or the raw force, to enforce an exchange rate, without borrowing in huge amounts.
There is, indeed, a "market", and when all the cuevas on a given afternoon suddenly drop how many pesos they will give you for a dollar, its the market speaking. Its certainly not Caputo.
And when literally billions of USD are squirrelled away in safe deposit boxes and under mattresses, against the law, that is mos def "the market".
markets are moved by rumor, emotion, weather, war, and even politics.
The recent legal loss in the YPF case is a great example.
When I talk about "big money", I am talking about the wealthy argentines who own the major corporations, utilities, news, phone, and tv stations, and, by and large, are and have been politicians for decades, or in the case of some families, centuries. 90% of the arable land is owned by less than a thousand entities. Most of the major corporations you and I pay are owned by a very small group of people in Argentina.
Even business listed on the Bolsa are run, in reality, by bosses, not shareholders.
They dont get together and decide in their evil boardroom, but they do share common interests, and have the ears or the seats of a lot of elected politicians and judges.
Milei does not have a majority, or even a real political party.
The ideas of his that get made into laws are usually watered down by more traditional ideas about economics, and history.
His most radical changes have almost all been executive orders.