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NATIONAL CENTER FOR POLICY ANALYSIS
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| Dollarization Might Save Argentina |

Daily Policy Digest

International Issues

Wednesday, December 05, 2001
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As has been widely reported, Argentina has become an economic basket case. Just this past weekend, the government imposed controls on bank withdrawals in order to stem a run on the banks. Economists say Argentina's only way out is either crippling devaluation or dollarization of its currency.
The International Monetary Fund expanded Argentina's standby loan agreement in August -- but the U.S. has put its foot down against any further assistance.
- The passage of Argentina's peso convertibility law a decade ago rescued the country from years of inflation and trade protectionism, economists say.
- It set up an effective currency board -- tying the Argentine peso to the dollar and leaving no possibility for the country's central bank to manipulate the peso.
- Although the peso was stabilized and trade revived, the politicians in Buenos Aires never controlled public spending -- resulting in an accumulation of $132 billion in debt as the government borrowed more and more money.
- Any solution now requires a restructuring of this debt, a reduction of the public deficit and a return to peso credibility.
Argentina wants still more international cash. But economists say at this late stage, only dollarization may be enough to restore peso confidence.
Source: Editorial, "Don't Cry for Argentina," Wall Street Journal, December 4, 2001.
For text http://online.wsj.com/ articles/SB1007431618681455280.htm
For more on International Currency Issues http://www.ncpa.org/iss/int/
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