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Montevideo, March 28th 2024 - 12:23 UTC

 

 

Argentina managed a quarterly primary surplus during the first quarter

Tuesday, April 23rd 2019 - 09:18 UTC
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The quarterly surplus was equivalent to 0.1% of the country’s GDP, the minister said in a presentation to reporters. The quarterly surplus was equivalent to 0.1% of the country’s GDP, the minister said in a presentation to reporters.

Argentina ran a primary fiscal deficit of 13.037 billion pesos (US$ 305.32 million) in March, the country’s Treasury minister Nicolás Dujovne said at a press conference on Monday, though posted a first-quarter surplus of 10.347 billion pesos.

The quarterly surplus was equivalent to 0.1% of the country’s GDP, the minister said in a presentation to reporters.

The government has agreed to wipe out the primary fiscal deficit this year, under a US$ 56.3 billion standby financing deal that President Mauricio Macri signed with the International Monetary Fund last year.

He was forced into the IMF agreement, which calls for unpopular subsidy cuts and tax increases, in 2018 when the plummeting value of the local peso sparked market jitters about Argentina’s ability to pay its dollar-denominated bonds.

Argentina has meanwhile pledged to freeze prices on dozens of staple products, including rice, sugar and milk, in a bid to rein in inflation and support recession-hit consumers ahead of Macri’s re-election bid in the October election.

The measures were announced after Argentina was jolted last week by news that inflation sped up to 4.7% in March and was running at a 12-month rate of almost 55%. Zooming consumer price increases have sapped people’s spending power while hammering Macri in the opinion polls.

Categories: Economy, Politics, Argentina.

Top Comments

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  • Enrique Massot

    This story is a joke, or just a propaganda piece.

    Achieving a “surplus” while starving the marketplace of currency and killing any remaining economic activity not only is not precisely a good news story.

    Of course, the decision power is no longer with minister Dujovne, not even with president Macri. The boss is now Mme. Lagarde, and the IMF is going ahead with its usual agenda that has starved the Argentine economy before as well as that of other countries.

    All Macri and his gang have achieved in 3 and a half years is to place the country in a dead end from which there is no easy solution.

    Talk about a heavy inheritance for the next government.

    Apr 24th, 2019 - 04:12 pm -3
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