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The negotiation between Argentina and the IMF is nearing its “D-day”

This content was published on 06 January 2022 – 10:26

Natalia Kidd

Buenos Aires, Jan 6 (EFE) .- Negotiations between Argentina and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to refinance multimillion-dollar loans granted in 2018 have been going on for more than a year and there is still a lack of consensus on core points, while heavy debt maturities are approaching As of March, the South American country is not in a position to cope.

At the end of August 2020, after reaching an agreement with private creditors to restructure foreign law bonds for almost 63.4 billion dollars, the Government of Alberto Fernández asked the Fund to open formal talks.

But the negotiations did not begin until October 2020, when the organization sent a technical mission to Argentina, after which there were several rounds of meetings and contacts at the highest political level.

Argentina seeks to seal with the Fund an agreement of extended facilities to refinance the debts contracted from the financial assistance agreement signed in 2018 between the organization and the then Government of Mauricio Macri (2015-2019).

That agreement stipulated loans to the South American country for up to $ 56.3 billion, of which $ 44.2 billion were finally disbursed, a debt that currently stands at $ 41 billion.

INTERNAL POLICY

When the negotiations began, the government was betting to reach an understanding in a few months.

The delay, according to analysts, is mainly due to errors in strategy and serious internal differences in the ruling coalition on the timing and scope of the adjustments and reforms that a new agreement would entail, differences that have caused “noise” in the negotiations.

“There was a strategic error by the Government of not having arranged with the Fund when it was agreed with the private bondholders because at that time the IMF was more willing to give a hand to countries with economic problems without so many requirements,” Leonardo Piazza told Efe , director of the consulting firm LP Consulting.

The expert also pointed out that the Government, “due to an ideological issue, was postponing the negotiations.”

The differences became evident when the Argentine vice president, Cristina Fernández, questioned, after the defeat of the ruling party in the legislative primaries last September, the gradual fiscal restraint that the Minister of Economy, Martín Guzmán, who commands the negotiations with the IMF.

This Wednesday, in a meeting with governors of the Argentine provinces in search of political support for the negotiation, Guzmán said that, although there are already agreements with the IMF on several points under discussion, there is a lack of consensus precisely on one “core” point: the fiscal .

According to the minister, while Argentina plans to lower the deficit as the economy grows, the IMF proposes “a program that with high probability would stop the economic recovery that Argentina is experiencing and that is essentially a program to adjust real spending.”

Despite these differences and the lack of international support, the government is optimistic about reaching an agreement.

According to Piazza, for the IMF it is “essential” to reach an understanding with Argentina, but one that is “credible” and that it does not have to be renegotiated within a few years and, in this sense, the organization is concerned about how to dismantle the “labyrinth” of the exchange restrictions in Argentina and how to lower the fiscal deficit.

TIMES ARE RUNNING OUT

“Now I do believe that the ideological internment in the Government is going to unblock because there is no other solution. Although it hurts, Cristina knows that the arrangement with the IMF is key for the economy to take off. She has no option,” he said Piazza.

According to the 2018 agreement, Argentina should pay the body, between capital and interest, 19,020 million dollars this year, 19,270 million in 2023 and 4,856 million in 2024.

The most voluminous commitments of this year begin to operate in March, when Argentina should pay 2,838 million dollars, putting even more pressure on the low level of the country’s net monetary reserves.

“The numbers rule. March is ‘D-day’ and there are no more excuses for not agreeing with the Fund,” warned Piazza.

In addition, the Paris Club has given Argentina until March 31 to agree with the IMF and extend until then the cancellation of the bulk of the country’s debt with that forum of 22 creditor countries of the South American nation. EFE

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