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Argentine economy contracted 2.5% in 2018, after shrinking 6.2% in fourth quarter

Friday, March 22nd 2019 - 09:00 UTC
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The economy contracted 6.2% in the fourth quarter of the year, in line with analyst forecasts, the weakest quarterly performance since 2009 The economy contracted 6.2% in the fourth quarter of the year, in line with analyst forecasts, the weakest quarterly performance since 2009

Argentina’s economy contracted 2.5% in 2018, the official statistics agency said on Thursday, as the Latin American country’s leaders struggle to revive growth after being rattled by a currency crisis and steep inflation over the past year.

The economy also contracted 6.2% in the fourth quarter of the year, in line with analyst forecasts, the weakest quarterly performance since 2009. That followed a 3.5% dip in the quarter before.

Reviving growth will be key for President Mauricio Macri ahead of a re-election battle in October, but the centre-right leader has little left in his arsenal to bolster the economy as he firefights stubborn inflation and fears over the peso.

Argentina has pledged tighter monetary policy to rein in inflation and raised interest rates to a sky-high 65% to help defend the local currency, measures likely to dampen growth in the near-term as firms struggle to raise cash.

“Tight monetary policy is an impediment to growth in the short-term but benefits outweigh the costs,” said Ilya Gofshteyn, New York-based senior emerging markets strategist at Standard Chartered Bank.

Argentina is in “dire straits on the growth front and it’s not going to turn around overnight,” Gofshteyn said, adding growth dynamics should improve in the back half of the year.

Macri’s government has pledged for now to rein in spending and cut government debt levels as part of a US$ 56.3 billion financing deal agreed with the International Monetary Fund last year, giving him less room for economic stimulus.

Macri said last year the country had been battered by “endless storms”, which pulled the country into recession, drove steep inflation and saw the local peso currency lose around half its value against the dollar.

The country’s unemployment rate, however, held steady at 9.1% in the fourth quarter, compared with 9% in the previous period, government data showed on Thursday. Jobs have been protected by generous local labor laws.

Categories: Economy, Politics, Argentina.

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  • Enrique Massot

    Certainly, this latest information showing by how much the Argentine economy has shrunk in 2018 goes on to confirm previous information about an accelerated decline of the activity, loss of jobs, closure of thousands of enterprises, dwindling consumption and many more discouraging news.

    Today, La Nacion newspaper informs, the Argentine monetary unit, the peso, is suffering yet another devaluation, as the US dollar goes to cost 43 pesos from 41 pesos, in spite of a reference interest rate of 66 per cent.

    On top of that, a developing scandal is rocking the very foundations of the Macri government. A federal judge investigating an extortion case popularly known as the D'Alessiogate has found connections among members of the judiciary, members of the Macri government, Cambiemos legislators, members of state intelligence and a journalist of the Clarin newspaper, working to intimidate members of the opposition and obtain cash from business people under threat of negative press and arrest.

    Clumsy attempts by a government on the defensive to take the case out of hands of judge Alejo Ramos Padilla had a response on March 21 in the form of demonstrations in several cities in support of the judge.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0x-uzz_-QFo

    Mar 22nd, 2019 - 05:03 pm 0
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