(REUTERS)    UPDATE 3-Argentina says to default again on World Bank debt
UPDATE 3-Argentina says to default again on World Bank debt
 
 (Adds World Bank confirmation, separate bond, paragraph 6)
    By Brian Winter
    BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, Dec 13 (Reuters) - Argentina's
government said it would default on more than $700 million due
to the World Bank on Friday, a second missed payment that cuts
the bankrupt country off from any aid from the bank.
    Argentina had already let pass a first deadline a month
ago, technically defaulting and ending any hope for new loans.
But Friday's missed payment, which was expected, cuts off
access to roughly $2 billion in existing financing that had
been earmarked for AIDS programs, high schools and farm aid.
    With almost all other outside credit choked off by a
chaotic four-year recession, the government said it lacks the
cash to pay the World Bank unless it breaks a months-long
stalemate in aid talks with the International Monetary Fund.
    Since November, Argentina has been in a league with Iraq
and Zimbabwe as a defaulter on multilateral loans.
    "If we reach a deal with the IMF, Argentina will start
paying its debts again," Cabinet Chief Alfredo Atanasof told
reporters. "We assume the responsibility as a country ... but
what we are saying is the bureaucracy at the fund has promoted
the policies that put us in this situation."
    A World Bank spokesman confirmed Argentina had told the
bank they would not be paying. Argentina's government said it
would also miss a separate payment of about $250 million due on
Monday for a World Bank-guaranteed bond.
    Most Argentines have become used to the idea of the country
not paying its foreign debts and financial markets shrugged off
the news. The country has been more focused lately on the
threat of food riots many believe are planned for Dec. 20 to
coincide with the anniversary of bloody protests that overthrew
a previous government.
    The government already suspended payment in January on
about $95 billion in debt held by private-sector creditors,
marking the biggest sovereign debt default in history.
    "They pay, they don't pay: at this point things can't get
any worse so nobody cares," said Carlos Lopez, a retired auto
executive who owns several small cafes in Buenos Aires. "As a
businessman, I get the feeling the worst of the uncertainty has
passed so this default doesn't hit me at all."
 
    RESERVES LOW
    Argentina has scrambled for nearly a year to get the IMF to
fork out enough money to cover debts owed to multilateral
bodies through 2003. But the IMF has told Argentina to make
deeper spending cuts and rally its divided politicians behind
an economic plan, something Argentina has been unable to do.
    "We saw this coming, but what they said about the IMF was
pretty tough," said Hernan Fardi, an economist for local
consultancy Maxinver. "Some say this is some kind of strategy
to pressure the IMF to reach a deal, but I doubt it. I think
they realize it's obvious that's not going to work."
    The World Bank said Argentina was due to pay $830.7 million
by the close of business on Friday. This amount includes $726
million in principal plus additional payments due and interest.
    The government argues that the penalty of not paying the
World Bank is outweighed by the danger of handing over $3.6
billion -- around a third of its foreign reserves -- owed to
the bank in interest and principal until the end of 2003.
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 REUTERS
***  end of story  ***
 
 

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