Ineffective Policies Push Argentina Into A Downward Spiral

 | Mar 06, 2013 12:26AM ET

The government's mishandling of Argentina's economy has hit recent new highs with the implementation of price controls on food. It is a notoriously anticilamtic policy that tends to create shortages and spawns black markets.

International Affairs Overview:
President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner's temporary price freeze on food products applies to all major food retailers, accounting for over 70% of the market. Historically, these types of economic policies have never produced positive results. Most often, food importers stop importing because they would lose money by selling their food at the prices ordered by the government. Customers of large retailers who stand in line hoping to buy at the frozen price will then find the shelves barren. This scarcity of goods will spawn a black market, where food will be sold at actual market prices. While some law enforcement officials may tolerate these black markets, other will try to dismantle them only to discover more tenacious entrepreneurs setting up shop the next corner up.

Unfortunately, the temporary price freeze is only part of an alarming trend towards financial mismanagement, which includes the expropriation of major foreign investments. Last year’s nationalization of Repsol YPF has infuriated Spain, one of Argentina’s largest foreign investors. Kirchner’s presidency has also been marred by accusations of falsifying CPI statistics (which provoked a strong rebuke from the IMF), a weakening of central bank independence, use of the nation’s currency reserves for political payoffs and the threat of default on its debt - again. To most outsiders it would appear that Argentina is repeating many of the mistakes that resulted in its economic crisis of the early 2000s.

In a classic case of "wag the dog", Argentina's government is trying to focus the population on external issues. Argentine officials are now taking an aggressive stance with respect to self-determination in the Falkland Islands. Tensions with the UK are likely to escalate further.

To make matters worse, fears of Argentina's technical default on its restructured dollar bonds are on the rise once again. That's in spite of recent hopes that Argentina may attempt to settle with the "holdouts". As a reflection of this uncertainty, the unofficial currency market is now pricing dollars at a 54% premium to the government's tightly controlled exchange rate.

Another troubling development is the relentless deterioration of Argentina's foreign reserves. Rumors persist that the government has moved dollars into "unofficial" accounts.
JPMorgan: - ... gross international reserves have fallen US$1.6 billion ytd, driven by a US$1.2 billion ytd fall of Treasury deposits at BCRA. What is odd, is that the decline of the Treasury’s cash position of the past two weeks cannot be related to any scheduled external debt payment.

Some have speculated that the goal is to prevent official dollar accounts from being frozen by US courts, if the legal case against the bond holdouts results in an unfavorable ruling for Argentina.

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