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		The IMF reaches a deal with troubled Argentina on a $20 billion bailout
		[April 09, 2025]  By 
		ISABEL DEBRE 
		BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — The International Monetary Fund on 
		Tuesday said it has reached a preliminary agreement with Argentina on a 
		$20 billion bailout, providing a welcome reprieve to President Javier 
		Milei as he seeks to overturn the country's old economic order.
 As a staff-level agreement, the rescue package still requires final 
		approval from the IMF’s executive board. The board will convene in the 
		coming days, the IMF statement said.
 
 The fund's long-awaited announcement offered a lifeline to President 
		Milei, who has cut inflation and stabilized Argentina's troubled economy 
		with a free-market austerity agenda. His policies have reversed the 
		reckless borrowing of left-wing populist governments that had brought 
		Argentina infamy for defaulting on its debts. The country has received 
		more IMF bailouts than any other.
 
 It came at a critical moment for South America's second-biggest economy. 
		Pressure had been mounting on Argentina’s rapidly depleting foreign 
		exchange reserves as the government tightened rules on money-printing 
		and burned through its scarce dollars to prop up the wobbly Argentine 
		peso.
 
 Fears grew that if the government failed to secure an IMF loan, hard-won 
		austerity measures would veer off-track and leave Argentina, once again, 
		unable to service its huge debts or pay its import bills.
 
 The fresh cash gives Milei a serious shot at easing Argentina's strict 
		foreign exchange controls, which could help convince markets of his 
		program's sustainability. For the past six years, the capital 
		restrictions have dissuaded investment, preventing companies from 
		sending profits abroad and ensuring the central bank's careful 
		management the peso, which is pegged to the dollar.
 
		 
		Racking up 22 IMF loans since 1958, Argentina owes the IMF more than $40 
		billion. Most IMF funds have been used repay the IMF itself, giving the 
		organization a fraught reputation among Argentines. Many blame the 
		lender for the country's historic economic implosion and debt default in 
		2001.
 The IMF was wary of striking yet another deal with its largest debtor. 
		But over the past 16 months, fund officials have praised Milei's 
		austerity — a diet harsher than even the fund's typical prescription.
 
 A former TV personality and self-proclaimed “ anarcho-capitalist,” Milei 
		came to power on a vow to shrink Argentina's bloated bureaucracy, kill 
		spiraling inflation, open the economy to international markets and woo 
		foreign investors after years of isolation.
 
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            Argentina's President Javier Milei arrives to speak before 
			President-elect Donald Trump during an America First Policy 
			Institute gala at his Mar-a-Lago estate, Nov. 14, 2024, in Palm 
			Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File) 
            
			
			
			 Unlike Argentine politicians in 
			years past who sought to avoid enraging the masses with brutal 
			austerity, Milei has taken his chainsaw to the state, firing tens of 
			thousands of state employees, dissolving or downgrading a dozen 
			ministries, gutting the education sector, cutting inflation 
			adjustments for pensions, freezing public works projects, lifting 
			price controls and slashing subsidies.
 Critics note that the poor have paid the highest price for 
			Argentina's rosy macroeconomic indicators. Retirees have been 
			protesting weekly against low pensions, with the decrease in 
			payments accounting for the largest share of Milei’s budget cuts. 
			Major labor unions announced a 36-hour general strike starting 
			Wednesday in solidarity.
 
 Still, Milei has maintained solid approval ratings, a surprise that 
			analysts attribute to his success in driving down inflation, which 
			dropped to 118% from 211% annually during his first year in office. 
			Flipping budget deficits to surpluses has sent the local stock 
			market booming and its country-risk rating, a pivotal barometer of 
			investor confidence, tumbling.
 
 “The agreement builds on the authorities’ impressive early progress 
			in stabilizing the economy, underpinned by a strong fiscal anchor, 
			that is delivering rapid disinflation,” the IMF said in announcing 
			the agreement under a 48-month arrangement. “The program supports 
			the next phase of Argentina’s homegrown stabilization and reform 
			agenda."
 
 It remained unclear how much money Argentina would receive up-front 
			— a key sticking point in the most recent negotiations over the 
			deal's details. Argentina is seeking a hefty payment upfront to 
			replenish its reserves, even as IMF loans are usually disbursed over 
			several years.
 
 Milei shared the IMF statement on social media platform X, attaching 
			a photo that showed him hugging Economy Minister Luis Caputo. “Vavos!” 
			he wrote — apparently misspelling “Vamos!” or “Let's go!” in his 
			excitement.
 
			
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