Crying With Argentina

January 1, 2002 

By PAUL KRUGMAN


 

Although images of the riots in Argentina have flickered
across our television screens, hardly anyone in the U.S.
cares. It's just another disaster in a small, faraway
country of which we know nothing - a country as remote and
unlikely to affect our lives as, say, Afghanistan. 

I don't make that comparison lightly. Most people here may
think that this is just another run-of-the-mill Latin
American crisis - hey, those people have them all the time,
don't they? - but in the eyes of much of the world,
Argentina's economic policies had "made in Washington"
stamped all over them. The catastrophic failure of those
policies is first and foremost a disaster for Argentines,
but it is also a disaster for U.S. foreign policy. 

Here's how the story looks to Latin Americans: Argentina,
more than any other developing country, bought into the
promises of U.S.-promoted "neoliberalism" (that's liberal
as in free markets, not as in Ted Kennedy). Tariffs were
slashed, state enterprises were privatized, multinational
corporations were welcomed, and the peso was pegged to the
dollar. Wall Street cheered, and money poured in; for a
while, free-market economics seemed vindicated, and its
advocates weren't shy about claiming credit. 

Then things began to fall apart. It wasn't surprising that
the 1997 Asian financial crisis had repercussions in Latin
America, and at first Argentina seemed less affected than
its neighbors. But while Brazil bounced back, Argentina's
recession just went on and on. 

I could explain at length the causes of Argentina's slump:
it had more to do with monetary policy than with free
markets. But Argentines, understandably, can't be bothered
with such fine distinctions - especially because Wall
Street and Washington told them that free markets and hard
money were inseparable. 

Moreover, when the economy went sour, the International
Monetary Fund - which much of the world, with considerable
justification, views as a branch of the U.S. Treasury
Department - was utterly unhelpful. I.M.F. staffers have
known for months, perhaps years, that the
one-peso-one-dollar policy could not be sustained. And the
I.M.F. could have offered Argentina guidance on how to
escape from its monetary trap, as well as political cover
for Argentina's leaders as they did what had to be done.
Instead, however, I.M.F. officials - like medieval doctors
who insisted on bleeding their patients, and repeated the
procedure when the bleeding made them sicker - prescribed
austerity and still more austerity, right to the end. 

Now Argentina is in utter chaos - some observers are even
likening it to the Weimar Republic. And Latin Americans do
not regard the United States as an innocent bystander. 

I'm not sure how many Americans, even among the policy
elite, understand this. The people who encouraged Argentina
in its disastrous policy course are now busily rewriting
history, blaming the victims. Anyway, we are notoriously
bad at seeing ourselves as others see us. A recent Pew
survey of "opinion leaders" found that 52 percent of the
Americans think that our country is liked because it "does
a lot of good"; only 21 percent of foreigners, and 12
percent of Latin Americans, agreed. 

What happens next? The best hope for an Argentine
turnaround was an orderly devaluation, in which the
government reduced the dollar value of the peso and at the
same time converted many dollar debts into pesos. But that
now seems a remote prospect. 

Instead, Argentina's new government - once it has one -
will probably turn back the clock. It will impose exchange
controls and import quotas, turning its back on world
markets; don't be surprised if it also returns to
old-fashioned anti-American rhetoric. 

And let me make a prediction: these retrograde policies
will work, in the sense that they will produce a temporary
improvement in the economic situation - just as similar
policies did back in the 1930's. Turning your back on the
world market is bad for long-run growth; Argentina's own
history is the best proof. But as John Maynard Keynes said,
in the long run we are all dead. 

Back in April, George W. Bush touted the proposed Free
Trade Area of the Americas as a major foreign policy goal,
one that would "build an age of prosperity in a hemisphere
of liberty." If that goal really was important, we have
just suffered a major setback. Don't cry for Argentina; cry
with it. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/01/01/opinion/01KRUG.html?ex=1010905113&ei=1&en=a5fd59f8fd485827



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