ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::History

Argentina's Economy in a Nutshell

Author : Dave Brown
Argentina's Economy



Contrary to conventional economic wisdom, rich countries tend to stay rich and poor countries tend to stay poor. The exceptions tend to be those "economic miracles", like Japan, that have lifted themselves from the ranks of the poor into the ranks of the economic elite.



Argentine economic history stands in stark contrast to that pattern. In the early 20th century, Argentina was one of the world's richest countries, with a higher per capita income than that of France or Germany. And while Argentina still enjoys many of the fruits of wealth, like a highly educated population and a modern infrastructure, income per head had fallen to a meager 43% of the rich-world average by 1987. In the wake of the economic collapse of 2001-2002, over half of the population fell under the poverty line, and over a quarter were classified as indigent.



Roots of Wealth



From 1880 to 1914, Argentina experienced a massive population boom as European immigrants came in search of land to settle and make productive. Many ended up in the fertile pampas region around Buenos Aires, and with the help of British-built rail links, an export economy was soon in full swing. On top of an already vibrant wool and hide industry, Argentines were soon exporting corn, wheat, and flour to hungrily industrializing European cities. But the real money was in meat exports, made possible by the invention of the refrigerator ship in 1876; Argentina has been famous for beef ever since.



The Long Decline



While Argentina became rich, Buenos Aires made the transition from sleepy backwater to thoroughly modern city—"The Paris of the South"—boldly leading Latin America into the new century. Unfortunately, the 20th century failed to meet the high hopes of any Latin American nation, least of all Argentina's.



The trouble started with the great depression of the 1930s, which kicked off a downward spiral into economic and political instability which lasted for the next sixty years. A military coup in 1930 was the first of many, and the civilian governments that occasionally emerged were scarcely more competent than the military juntas.



The government of Juan Domingo Peron (1946-1955) left an indelible mark on the Argentine economy, making it less open to foreign trade, nationalizing key industries, and greatly expanding the benefits of workers. While Peron was somewhat able to redress the gross inequalities permeating the country, he also left a legacy of state control of the economy, stifling private entrepreneurship and creating an environment ripe for corruption.



In the post-Peron years, governments increasingly relied on deficit spending to smooth out social problems. To cover the difference between spending and tax revenue, they simply printed more money, creating inflation. By the 1980s, inflation was out of control; in 1989 the inflation rate was over 5,000 percent.



The 90s Boom



Enter Domingo Cavallo, who stepped in as Carlos Menem's economy minister in 1991. The keystone in Cavallo's economic recovery plan was to curb inflation with something called convertibility, a legal guarantee that Argentine pesos could be exchanged for US dollars at a ratio of 1 to 1. Inflation was tamed, and investor confidence soared as Cavallo steadily opened up the economy to foreign trade and capital. In tune with the free market fervor of the 1990s, the more inefficient state-controlled enterprises were sold—sometimes to Menem's friends at bargain prices.



Still, Argentina was clearly getting richer. The gross domestic product grew briskly from 1991 to 1998, with the exception of 1995, when Mexico's financial crisis shook Latin America. Much of the new wealth was accruing to the country's elites, but the poor and the middle class were also becoming better off. The Argentine debacle was starting to look like the Argentine miracle; Carlos Menem became an international celebrity and Argentina a poster child for liberal economics.



The Crisis of 2001-2002



Ironically, Argentina's blatant disregard for a fundamental tenet of "neoliberal" economics proved to be a decisive factor in its demise. As the 90s boom roared on and the government's tax take soared, fiscal discipline would suggest setting aside a "rainy day" fund for the event of a recession—because recessions are inevitable in any economy. Instead, the money was spent and new debt was piled up even in the good years. When the economy hit a rough patch in 1999, the government found itself in an extremely difficult situation; it needed money fast and was already significantly indebted.



Luckily for Menem, his term was up and the new President, Fernando de la Rúa, was left to pick up the pieces in 2000. He could try to balance the budget by cutting spending or raising taxes, but this would exacerbate the recession and further reduce tax revenues. Faced with this catch-22, de la Rúa opted to borrow his way out, in the hope that the recession would quickly and quietly fade away. Unfortunately, this approach often leads to a downward spiral of its own, known as "explosive debt dynamics", in which investors begin to fear a default on the debt, driving interest rates up and deepening the recession, thus increasing the debt even more. This is exactly what ended up happening in Argentina's case.



As a last ditch effort, de la Rúa appointed as his economy minister Domingo Cavallo, now a national legend, in a move that electrified the country. But neither Cavallo's mystique or the IMF's haphazard intervention could stave off the coming default. As dollars started to flee Argentina, the government enacted restrictions on bank withdrawals that became known as the corralito, or little fence. In the public eye, this was the final straw, and massive street protests rocked Buenos Aires and other big cities, forcing de la Rúa and Cavallo to resign in shame in late December , 2001. The government had collapsed; Argentina defaulted on its debt a few days later.



One of the first acts of Eduardo Duhalde, the new president elected by congress at the start of 2002, was to discontinue the convertibility system by which the peso was linked to the US dollar. With the shortage of dollars in the country, the system couldn't be maintained; there simply weren't enough dollars to trade for pesos. Set free, the peso fell to about 4 to the dollar over the next six months, spelling ruin for those who had taken out loans denominated in dollars. Banks ceased to function as individual debtors defaulted and now-cynical savers refused to deposit money. The poverty rate soared while incomes plummeted. The Argentine financial crisis has been compared in scope to America's great crash of 1929.



After the Crisis



The very dark cloud of Argentina's collapse did have a silver lining. The peso recovered slightly and has held steady at about 3 to the US dollar, a level that makes Argentina's products (and Argentina as a travel destination) much more attractive to the rest of the world. In fact, some have argued that one cause of the crisis was the overvalued exchange rate, which made Argentine exports less competitive. The economy was growing again in 2003, and has since, fueled in part by high worldwide commodity prices. In 2005, GDP roared past its previous peak (in 1998), and many economists believe Argentina is on firmer ground than it was in the 90s owing to the fiscal responsibility of Nestor Kirchner, the current president.



Looking to the future, rising inequality is one concern deeply felt by many Argentines. The recovery has put more wealth in the hands of the wealthy, like the soy farmers leading the new export boom or those who were lucky enough to get their money out before the devaluation. On the upside, employment is up, and a fiscally solvent state will be in a much better position to help those on the bottom rungs of society climb higher.


Article Source: http://www.articledashboard.com





Visit Argentina Cafe Travel Guide to learn more about Argentina's history.





Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Argentina's Economy in a Nutshell
  2. History of Olmec Civilisation
  3. The First Serial Killer - Ed Gein
  4. Another Look at Mahatma Gandhi
  5. Ferdinand Marcos - President of the Philippines, 1917-1989
  6. Augusto Pinochet, President of Chile, born 1915
  7. The USSR That Could Have been - Lenin's New Economic Policy
  8. The Uganda Scheme
  9. The Teapot Dome Scandal
  10. The Story of the Guillotine
  11. The First September 11
  12. The Family of Jesus Christ
  13. The Constitution of the Weimar Republic
  14. The Building of the Pentagon
  15. The Armenian Genocide
  16. The Abdication Crisis Revisited
  17. More about the Prohibition
  18. Lindbergh, Charles Augustus
  19. Human-made Monsters
  20. Facts and Figures about the Presidents of the USA
  21. Another Look at Indians (Native Americans, Amerindians)
  22. A Moment of Truth about Maxim Gorky
  23. Dr. Walter Freeman's Frontal Lobotomies at Athens (Ohio) State Hospital
  24. Myths of the American Civil War
  25. The Aung San Family in Myanmar
More related feeds
Global Economy Matters: The Spanish Crisis In A Nutshell
Spain is sliding into a crisis that looks all too like the early stages of Argentina's debacle.The Spanish government has detained at sea more than 1000 migrants, in the last in a nutshell that the socialist government helped cause this ...

Argentina's Economy in a Nutshell
The government of Juan Domingo Peron (1946-1955) left an indelible mark on the Argentine economy, making it less open to foreign trade, nationalizing key industries, and greatly expanding the benefits of workers. ...

argentina’s economy in a nutshell
... tend to stay rich and poor countries tend to stay poor. the exceptions tend to be those "economic miracles", like japan, that have lifted themselves from the ranks of the poor into the ranks of the economic elite. argentine economic...

Euro Watch: The Spanish Crisis In A Nutshell
I think this is the core of the Spanish crisis in a nutshell. To better understand how it all works out in practice across the real economy you will need to dig around in my earlier posts, and to understand the implications of what all ...

Global Economy Matters: Some Random Thoughts On The Deflation Problem
Consequently, one thing that I have been persistently noting in my ongoing analysis of the global economy has been the risk of deflation in key economies due to the dramatic decline in domestic demand and credit momentum. ...

Global Economy Matters: Exports Drop Sharply As Japan Officially ...
The Japanese cabinet officially recognised this week that Japan's economy has entered its first recession since 2001, following a second quarterly contraction in Q3 2008. Claus Vistesen has already analysed (in this post) the key issues ...

argentina’s economy in a nutshell
[cdata[ argentina's economy contrary to conventional economic wisdom, rich countries tend to stay rich and poor countries tend to stay poor. the exceptions tend to be those “economic miracles”, like japan, that have lifted themselves ...

US Economy: 17
The 1920s was, in a nutshell, a really bad mix of government policies. It all started with the previous bubble which was created by WWI and its monetary expansion. Note how one bubble lays the seeds for the next one. ...

Karajia's Sarcophagus (Northern Peru (( reedited)) | Go to South ...
Karajia’s Sarcophagus (Northern Peru (( reedited)) · Argentina’s Economy in a Nutshell · World Cup 2006 Preview - Argentina · The Amazonas of Peru (Chapters 4 throu 8) · Argentine Spanish versus Spanish from Spain Do They Even Speak The ...

Global Economy Matters: As The Federal Reserve Readies-Up ...
Secondly, the central bank can target some assets that are thought to have a broad impact on the economy, such as Treasuries or mortgage-backed bonds. The US Federal Reserve has already taken a half-step in that direction by purchasing ...

 


 

2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved