-Caveat Lector-

THE TIMES
THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 06 2001

Argentina stares at economic abyss

FROM JAMES DORAN IN BUENOS AIRES

IN A coffee bar in central Buenos Aires, Alejandro Schulenquer, a once-
prosperous car salesman, stared blankly at the headlines in three different 
newspapers, each proclaiming a new
means of salvation from national financial ruin.
He grimaced at a picture of Domingo Cavallo, the Finance Minister, who claims that he 
will steer Argentina
away from economic meltdown.

"He cannot save the economy from collapse," Se�or Schulenquer said. "It has already 
collapsed. Now they try to
change the figures every day to give us hope. But there is none."

Such hopelessness hangs over everyone in Buenos Aires. The holiday guide books tell of 
shops filled with
luxury goods, flamboyant tango dancers in San Telmo and colourful bohemians in La Boca 
and Palermo Viejo. But
the streets, shops and restaurants are mostly empty.

The financial crisis that is gripping Argentina has bled dry the Porte�os, the people 
of Buenos Aires. Jobs
have been cut by the thousand; unemployment is now at a record 17 per cent. Wages have 
been slashed and
pensioners and the unemployed find their state handouts shrivelled to worthless levels.

The source of Argentina's economic woe is its crippling $128 billion (�88 billion) 
debt. Last month the
International Monetary Fund awarded the country $8 billion, which followed another 
award of $40 billion in
December. Yet even after such huge injections of money, Argentina's prospects remain 
bleak. Worse, time is
running out. The country has less than 90 days to prove that its promises to the IMF 
can be kept.

Default would increase the risk of global recession. Neighbours, in particular Brazil 
would be hit first and
hardest. But it would be disastrous for Argentina. Its financial infrastructure, 
dominated by foreign banks,
would collapse. Unemployment would soar. Poverty, already at Third-World levels in 
most rural provinces, would
become entrenched. Worst of all, it would very likely shut off foreign investment and 
trade, the only route
back to health.

Michael Smith, chief executive of the Argentine arm of HSBC, the global banking group, 
said: "If Argentina
does default, this will be a closed market for at least ten years. There will be no 
banks to speak of, no
foreign investment, nothing. It would become a wasteland."

Faced by this prospect and overshadowed by the corruption and debt in previous 
governments that has led them
to it, President De La Rua and Se�or Cavallo continue to smile, albeit grimly. Each 
day they unveil new
reforms designed to stave off default.

Many blame Se�or Cavallo for the present emergency, since he was Finance Minister 
under Carlos Menem, the
former President, who privatised many state-owned industries and opened up financial 
markets, only for the
billions of dollars raised to disappear instead of paying off the national debt or 
restructuring the economy.

Nevertheless, Se�or Cavallo has acted swiftly since he was appointed in March. His big 
idea is the
"zero-deficit" plan, under which Argentina must live within its means, spending no 
more than it receives in
taxes. He is also trying to attack the plague of tax evasion, thought to be 40 per 
cent, while the President
tries to stem the flow of cash to cumbersome, corrupt public services. Billions of 
dollars are lost each year
in back- handers, pay-offs and fraud.

Mart�n Redrado, chairman of the Fundaci�n Capital economic think-tank and a former 
head of the country's
Securities and Exchange Commission, calls the cuts "butchery", but it is possible that 
Se�or Cavallo will
succeed. Se�or Redrado noted that, from a $5.9 billion deficit in the first half of 
this year, Argentina is on
track to overspend by only $151 million in the second half.

However, success relies upon Se�or Cavallo's measures performing as promised. The 
weakest of those may be wage
cuts. Se�or Redrado argues that the 13 per cent reduction in state wages and pensions 
needs to be "more like
24 per cent", but "the people will not accept that". As it is, there have been 
protests. Last week, more than
30,000 gathered in front of the government building, promising violence if wages were 
not restored. In Buenos
Aires, employees are not being paid in money at all, but in "patacones", bonds 
exchanged for goods and
services in approved shops, because the province has no cash.

The prevailing view is that the only thing keeping Argentina from collapse today is, 
as Se�or Redrado put it:
"Fear. Fear of the abyss."

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