Ignorance or bliss?

Argentina requests IMF technical aid to help with a new prices index

Argentina’s Economy minister Amado Boudou announced Tuesday that the President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner's administration is to request aid from the International Monetary Fund to help with a new price index.


“We will ask for technical assistance in order to draw up a new consumer price index,” the Minister stated. The index will aim at monitoring the evolution of the domestic cost of living at a national level.
Boudou's acknowledgment and request come within the framework of the controversy surrounding Argentina’s INDEC national statistics bureau measurements and the rumours involving the Paris Club creditors’ intervention on the debt-restructuring process.
IMF's participation in the outlining of a new consumer price index was allegedly negotiated in Washington last week, during a meeting attended by Foreign Affairs Minister Héctor Timerman and Finance Minister Amado Boudou.
Business organizations, the opposition and foreign investors holding sovereign bonds tied to the evolution of prices have bitterly complained about the manipulation of Indec indices. The controversy dates back to former President Nestor Kirchner’s administration when he removed most of the professionals from ...that... respected institution and replaced them with political cronies.
Although Indec official inflation is in the range of 11%, most private economic and financial analysts, including the group of professionals sacked from the statistics office, estimate the figure closer to 25% and increasing.
Labour contracts between unionized workers and businesses are taking as reference 25%, in spite of the fact that the all powerful Argentine Confederation of Workers, CGT, is fully supportive of the Kirchner administration.
A little inflation is not bad after all”, the CGT leader and teamsters’ boss Hugo Moyano was quoted when asked about the ongoing controversy.


http://en.mercopress.com/2010/11/23...ewsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=daily

"A little inflation is not bad" especially when you apparently pay lip service to govt stats in order to maintain your political leverage while at the same time demanding reality-based inflationary wage hikes for your union members -as others flounder.
 
The bonds attached to inflation are not an issue any more, so the INDEC inflation statistics are harmless right now.
Regards
 
I also read Clarin y La Nacion. They both ran the same story and quotes

Of course they do, they are the same thing. I prefer a thousand times this inflation to the almost-death of the country after its neocon experience. Never again.
 
Bajo_cero2 said:
The bonds attached to inflation are not an issue any more, so the INDEC inflation statistics are harmless right now.
Regards
DId all replacement bonds issued in 2005 get paid off?
 
Bajo_cero2 said:
The bonds attached to inflation are not an issue any more, so the INDEC inflation statistics are harmless right now.
Regards
Fraudulent statistics are never "harmless". Ask the bondholders who still hold inflation indexed bonds or non unionized workers.
If they were harmless CFK would not even be considering her remap of the Indec process.
 
Guess what people. We won this one. We lied about some numbers and we won. About time also. Hey, at least its not like lying about WMDs and killing thousands and thousands of people, right?
 
marksoc said:
Guess what people. We won this one. We lied about some numbers and we won. About time also. Hey, at least its not like lying about WMDs and killing thousands and thousands of people, right?


Grow up and stop using innocent deaths for point scoring. Most if not many expats and indeed the world agree that the Iraq war was a disgusting act that noone is proud of. In that sense we are ashamed of our respective politicians who led us and the innocents ito the war..you however seem to be very proud of your politicians!
 
An Economist review of a newly published book written by the senior IMF rep in Russia during the chaos after its 1998 default on domestic debt.

http://www.economist.com/research/a...m?story_id=17572416&subjectID=526358&fsrc=nwl
"BEFORE the global economic crisis, the IMF’s slide into irrelevance seemed assured. Now it is back at the front line of gargantuan bail-out packages, wrangling over government spending and tax reform, and attempts to stop sovereign defaults further disturbing the jittery global financial system. Few would doubt that the fund faces a thankless task in countries such as Pakistan and Greece. But its missions are also intensely political and their success fundamentally unpredictable.
...But there is a particularly otherworldly feeling to the tale of the Russian government setting up an agency to galvanise tax collection, apparently without realising that its acronym, VChK, was identical to that of a much-hated early Bolshevik secret police force, making it an easy target for political opponents. "

I wonder how much the antipathy of Argentines to the IMF has to do with (1) allegedly unfair, forced sales of national assets (and other unfair "NEO" tactics) versus (2) the IMF's attempts to galvanize tax collection in a society where 50% reportedly work in "negra" and have no liability for tax payments and in which "progressives" boast how clever they were to cheat on the repayment of national debt.
 
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