https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/argentina-financial-crisis-historical-pattern-tragedy-farce-by-andres-velasco-2022-07
Argentina’s Never-Ending Tragic Farce
Jul 27, 2022ANDRÉS VELASCO
Argentine voters are no strangers to financial
turmoil, but they keep electing politicians who run large fiscal deficits and
finance them by printing pesos. Could it be that the only way for politicians
to show they want to save the economy is to destroy it first?
SANTIAGO – Karl Marx wrote that all great
“world-historical facts” occur twice: “the first time as tragedy, the second as
farce.” But what if they happen again and again, every few years, decade after
decade? Is that tragic or farcical? Are such facts no longer
“world-historical”? Or does the world just stop caring?
Those thoughts come to mind as yet another
Argentine financial crisis unfolds. A whiff of farce is in the air: A president
called Fernández clashes with a vice president also called Fernández (no
relation), causing the economy minister to resign. The incoming minister announces that she will cut the fiscal
deficit, even though Vice President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who
really calls the
shots, has made it
clear she wants an even larger deficit. Markets go crazy, and the peso
tumbles, resulting in a 150% gap between the
black-market exchange rate – euphemistically known locally as the blue rate –
and the official rate.
Argentina got to this point the same way that
it got into economic trouble so many times in the past century. First,
politicians promise higher expenditure but are unwilling to raise taxes to pay
for it. The government then borrows until markets stop lending. Then the
central bank prints pesos to finance both the primary deficit and debt-service
payments until citizens refuse to hold the additional pesos. A run on the
currency ensues.
But now there are two new twists. Previously,
falling agricultural prices (Argentina is a big exporter) often helped trigger
a crisis. In 2022, however, Argentina got into trouble even though commodity
prices were until recently sky-high, owing largely to Russia’s war against
Ukraine. It takes a certain talent for a commodity exporter to engineer a
balance-of-payments crisis during a commodity boom.
In the past, Argentina borrowed mostly from
abroad, and the financial squeeze occurred once Wall Street stopped lending.
This time – in the second new twist – foreigners were unwilling to lend, so the
borrowing occurred at home. Until recently, the Argentine Treasury was issuing
the required bonds, but the local market also has become frozen, so the central
bank is financing an increasing share of the fiscal deficit by printing pesos.
In a mostly futile attempt to limit the inflationary impact of all that new
money, the central bank has been attempting to sterilize it by issuing its own
short-maturity bonds, which now amount to nearly 10% of GDP.
Since the central bank is owned by the
Treasury, savers skeptical of Treasury bonds have no reason to hold more and
more central bank bonds. At some point, they may well refuse to buy or roll
over those, too. Then a debt crisis, unchecked money creation, or both, will be
the only way forward.
The policies may look farcical, but the
consequences are tragic. Annual inflation is running at a three-decade
high and could reach 80% this year, and real wages are falling. Dollars are so
scarce that many firms cannot import the inputs or spare parts they need.
Argentina’s economy rebounded
strongly last year after
its 2020 pandemic-induced collapse, but growth is expected to slow in 2022. In the event of a
full-blown financial crisis, growth could be zero or negative in 2023.
The available policy options also are anything
but new. The government could accelerate the controlled depreciation of the
official exchange rate or engineer a step devaluation; but, with inflation now
spiking, that is unlikely to be enough. Or it could simply tighten capital
controls and hope for the best. But, to paraphrase Abraham Lincoln, you can
close some of the windows for capital outflows some of the time, but you cannot
close all the windows all the time.
It does not take a graduate of the University
of Chicago or a former International Monetary Fund official to recognize that
Argentina’s problem is mostly fiscal. Primary government expenditures rose by
over 10% year on year in real terms in the first half of 2022, on top of a much
larger increase during the pandemic. Although the commodity boom has been
keeping revenues temporarily high, the expected 2022 fiscal gap of 3.5% of GDP
exceeds the 2.5%-of-GDP target agreed with the IMF. A deficit of
3.5% of GDP is not sustainable for a government with no access to international
capital markets and rapidly vanishing access to domestic savings.
Whether fiscal policy is sustainable also
depends on the economy’s growth rate and the cost of public debt. Argentina’s
economy grows little and productivity is stagnant, owing in part to a highly
distortive tax structure. And, given its checkered financial history, the
government must pay a much higher interest rate than other emerging nations.
So, here is the Catch-22: Argentina must fix its fiscal policy if the economy
is to grow, and growth must increase in order to render fiscal policy
sustainable.
The fiscal problem is compounded by a political
problem. Any promises from a government whose two leading figures are
constantly squabbling will lack credibility. Just as former US President
Richard Nixon, a Republican, was best placed to seek a rapprochement with Mao Zedong’s China,
left-wing Argentine Peronists would be best placed to carry out a lasting
fiscal adjustment. Because they refuse to do so, hyperinflation, by eroding the
real value of fiscal expenditures, may end up doing the job for them.
Argentina’s people have experienced high and
recurrent inflation for nearly a century. They have witnessed at least nine
defaults on external public debt (the first one in 1827 and the most recent in
2020). And they have lived through bank runs and currency runs of all shapes
and sizes. Yet, they keep electing politicians (mostly but not exclusively
Peronists) who run large fiscal deficits and finance them by printing pesos.
Why?
One possibility is that extreme ideological
obtuseness survives all encounters with reality and makes change impossible.
Axel Kicillof, a former economy minister under Fernández de Kirchner, wrote that talk of an “uncontrolled
fiscal deficit” is just a “scam” to “continue cutting off rights.”
Harvard economists Rafael Di Tella and the late
Julio Rotemberg propose a different
theory: Populist
politicians adopt extreme and ultimately unsustainable policies to signal that
they are not in the pocket of powerful elites. In a society with as little
mutual trust as Argentina’s, the only way politicians can show they want to
save the economy is to destroy it first. In this, they have succeeded:
Argentina’s ever-repeating farce is nothing short of tragic.
Writing for PS since 2001
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Andrés Velasco, a former presidential candidate
and finance minister of Chile, is Dean of the School of Public Policy at the
London School of Economics and Political Science. He is the author of numerous
books and papers on international economics and development, and has served on
the faculty at Harvard, Columbia, and New York Universities.
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