ArgentinaVet
Registered
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2022
- Messages
- 133
- Likes
- 218
What I have been saying for months and many of you folks have been failing to understand is that Argentina is only cheap in dollars when there are politically caused price distortions and FX controls that result in a big spread between official and parallel FX rates. In the years when that was not the case (1990s, 2010-2012, 2016-2018) Argentina has been a relatively expensive place in USD. The natural state of equilibrium in Argentina under the current unreformed system is one of awful labor productivity (has actually declined 5% over last decade or two, compared with 30% increase in rest of LATAM), inefficient logistics/distribution, and among highest nominal tax rates in the world that combined to make the place quite expensive.Facts are excellent, 3-month old facts (@Bajo_cero2 's article is from January) are pretty useless with this government. I did search for recent data on the M1 - M3 measures of cash in the economy but I didn't find any from after January.
For those who, despite all evidence, "feel" that there's a plan behind this mess, how do you get from continuing high Peso emission, as the article says, to "Milei promises to criminalize monetary emission" (https://buenosairesherald.com/politics/congress-opening-speech-javier-milei-pacto-de-mayo) without stopping the Peso printing presses? Am I expecting too much logic and joined-up-thinking from Milei and his boosters here? And, more important to most of us than these feelings, how is the Peso overvaluation relative to the Dollar to be explained?
To go back to the Argenzuela analogy, Venezuela has had both Bolivar and Dollar inflation, but I expect mostly because it destroyed internal production and imports even basic foodstuff, which is not the case with Argentina (yet).
Milei haș been in office for only four months; expecting any sort of improvement in such a short time when he is trying to unwind 90 years of chaos, disorder, instability, inefficiency, corruption, socialist thinking, etc is simply naive.
The reality is for Argentina to ever achieve a stable economic system with consistent growth and low inflation the following has to occur:
current account surplus
fiscal surplus
unsubsidized utilities
simplifying tax system to promote maximum production
public health care and education systems that are not free for foreigners.
labor law reforms that make hiring workers a non risk and affordable.
special tax and inventive regime for FDI
These policies cannot be achieved overnight or without going through the pain of the transition process. Have some patience.