Argentina’s Tax Amnesty: Another Shot On Goal

 | Nov 11, 2016 06:06AM ET

Mauricio Macri won the presidency of Argentina in November of last year. In December he gave the Argentine economy its first dose of tough medicine: a 30% devaluation of the peso. In U.S. dollar terms, the Argentine stock market bottomed in January, and since then has rallied about 70%.

Macri’s pro-business reforms have brought Argentina back into the global community after its exile under Nestor Kirchner and Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, his immediate predecessors. The Kirchners were Perónists – Argentina’s home-grown populist political and economic doctrine that originated with President Juan Perón in the 1950s, and which over the decades led to deep economic dysfunction. Macri’s narrow victory last year was heralded as a watershed moment for the country. He put an end to the long standoff between Argentina and some of its holdout creditors, opening the way for the country’s access to international capital.

The most recent policy victory that shows how Macri is shepherding Argentina’s battered economy is a tax amnesty. This amnesty was announced in May: Argentines with cash under the mattress at home, or held in undisclosed accounts abroad, would be able to bring their money out of the shadows, avoid penalties, and pay taxes owed at a low rate. It runs through the end of the year, and observers who know the behavior of Argentines expect the bulk of funds to come in during the last weeks of December.

Argentines are thought to be holding $200 to $400 billion in unreported assets cash domestically and abroad – an entirely reasonable consequence of the government’s wealth-destroying habits over the past decade-plus. Analysts think between $60 and $80 billion will be declared under the amnesty, resulting in government revenues of as much as $6 billion and capital inflows of as much as $14 billion. The revenues will help the government get through 2017, the last really challenging year of debt maturation, with less debt issuance and more funds available for infrastructure spending to boost the economy.