The Guardian view on Argentina’s austerity year

Well, that's a different take than what I would have expected from the Guardian.
What happened to fawning over Milei's "economic miracle"? Perhaps the honeymoon is over.
 
Well, that's a different take than what I would have expected from the Guardian.
What happened to fawning over Milei's "economic miracle"? Perhaps the honeymoon is over.
Why are you surprised? The Guardian is very left and very liberal, it is exactly the take one could expect from them. Unfortunately the honeymoon is in full swing as far as most of the global press goes. Did you read the Jon Lee Anderson piece in "The New Yorker" on Milei?
 
Why are you surprised? The Guardian is very left and very liberal, it is exactly the take one could expect from them. Unfortunately the honeymoon is in full swing as far as most of the global press goes. Did you read the Jon Lee Anderson piece in "The New Yorker" on Milei?
I'll be taking that in later today.
 

Archived version
I thought it was a fairly poor article by The Grauniad. For example, this doesn't reflect out current reality: "Mr Milei devalued the peso, triggering a spike in domestic prices while using currency controls to keep a lid on further inflationary pressures".

And I was away for a few weeks, but "Violent protests against these measures rocked Buenos Aires this summer"?.

They may have nailed it with this, though: "Mr Milei’s bet is that he can fool enough people into leaving his mess for his successor to clean up. It’s a cynical, short‑sighted wager that neglects the need for meaningful reforms in Argentina".

I thought this article gave a bit more insight into what those of us who are here are living: https://batimes.com.ar/news/opinion-and-analysis/main-street-and-milei-street.phtml
 
There are no "reforms" left. Argentina is heavily indebted with insufficient foreign trade balance to make any meaningful repayments. Unless a commodity boom lifts the country's chances, it will be a heavy slog of constant fiscal restraint to divert otherwise productive funds to creditors (and their burgeoning interest). Which, let's face it, the repayment timeline will surely not last enough sequential administrations to successfully pull off. Already sour public sentiment about the IMF and austerity fatigue will eventually come to bite.
 
Back
Top