What Are They Doing to Argentina?
By Mark Weisbrot
This article was published in the following news outlets:
Knight-Ridder/Tribune Information Services - June 19, 2002
Miami Herald - June 25, 2002
Record -Herald (Washington Court House, Ohio) - July 7, 2002
Dodge City Daily Globe - August 3, 2002
The
head of the IMF's delegation to Argentina was recently cornered outside his
hotel room by reporters from a popular, muck-raking television show. They handed
him a set of large, plastic Halloween vampire teeth. "We found these lodged
in President Duhalde's neck," they told him, "and wanted to return
them to you."
Such
views of the IMF are commonly held in Argentina, and contrast sharply with those
expressed in Washington media and policy circles. Here, the debate has been
about whether the IMF should "help" Argentina, which is suffering from
four years of economic depression, a collapse of its currency and banking
system, and default on its public debt. The doves say yes, the country is
desperate; the hawks say no, not until the government demonstrates more
willingness to "reform."
Both
sides are misreading the actual situation. The IMF is not offering any help to
the Argentine economy. Even if an agreement is reached, there will be no new
money—only enough to pay the Fund and other official creditors such as the
World Bank.
Furthermore,
Argentina is not facing a simple choice of whether to accept or refuse this
"help." It is much worse than that. The IMF is using its power as head
of an international creditors' cartel to prolong Argentina's agony. Credit from
the World Bank, from European governments, and even the day-to-day credit that
businesses need to conduct international trade are being held up until the IMF
gives the ok.
This
distinction is crucial. Imagine that someone is drowning, and a passerby does
nothing to save him. This would be morally reprehensible. But what if the
drowning man is trying to claw his way onto the shore, and the passerby kicks
him and pushes him back into the river?
The
latter case is much worse, not only from a moral but a practical point of view:
the drowning man might save himself if not for the outside intervention.
Very
simply, the IMF is practicing a form of extortion, and a fairly brutal one at
that. A couple of months ago the World Bank was supposed to release some $700
million in funds for the unemployed—now numbering about a quarter of
Argentina's labor force. But they decided to wait for the IMF's approval.
On a
recent visit to Argentina, I met with Dr. Nestor Oliveri, a physician who runs a
health clinic for the poor in the neighborhood of Matanza, on the outskirts of
Buenos Aires. He pointed to children jumping over an open drainage ditch.
"They touch their mouths, and they get parasites. We have 30% malnutrition
among children in this neighborhood."
And
it is getting worse, in a country that was until recently the richest in Latin
America.
What
does the IMF want from Argentina? After more than six months of talks and
pressure, it is not even clear. The government has already agreed to just about
everything that the Fund demanded, including drastic spending cuts (especially
for the provincial governments) and rewriting their bankruptcy laws to make
these more favorable to creditors. Yet the IMF keeps moving the goal posts, and
coming up with new demands. Some financial analysts have concluded that the IMF
is deliberately punishing Argentina for defaulting on its international debt, so
as to discourage others from taking this path.
The
Fund's policy conditions will probably worsen the depression, by causing layoffs
of hundreds of thousands of workers and reducing aggregate demand in the
economy. For four years, the IMF has been arguing that the only way to get the
economy growing is to first restore the confidence of investors, especially
foreign investors.
But
the measures that they have recommended to do this, such as cutting government
spending, have further weakened the economy. These policies have therefore had
the opposite effect. And now, by choking off credit from most other
sources—i.e., its extortion—the Fund is accelerating the decline.
Unlike
most countries that turn to the Fund, Argentina is currently running a trade
surplus. This means that it does not really need external financing. Nor does it
need dollars to fix its banking system, which now runs on pesos.
In
other words, the country is capable of recovering on its own. At this point the
biggest obstacle to re-starting growth may be the Fund itself. As the crisis
drags on, Argentina may have to find a way to get around the IMF.
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