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Business Daily

Argentina’s latest IMF crisis

Business Daily

BBC

News, Business

4.4796 Ratings

🗓️ 11 February 2022

⏱️ 18 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Argentina’s government and the International Monetary Fund have been renegotiating the terms of a 2018 loan issued to the country – the largest in IMF history. The Fund’s own internal analysis of that deal was scathing. The 2018 package had been vaunted for its commitment to protecting the most vulnerable in society. Yet people in Argentina, and particularly those on the lowest incomes, are currently enduring a cost of living crisis, with inflation running at above 50% in 2021, and wages struggling to keep pace with increased housing, food and energy costs. Amy Booth is a journalist in Argentina, and says many people have lost hope in the midst of the country’s seemingly interminable economic crisis. Daniel Munevar, who works on debt justice at the European Network on Debt and Development, says the IMF broke its own rules in order to issue the 2018 loan. Carolina Millán is Bloomberg’s bureau chief in Buenos Aires, and tells us that the Fund’s decades-long association with austerity and misery in Argentina loom large over any potential new deal between the two parties. Former IMF executive director and Argentine diplomat Héctor Torres says he’s sceptical that a prospective 22nd loan from the lender to the country will end differently to previous failures. Argentina isn’t the only country struggling with debt, either. Former IMF chief economist Ken Rogoff says that more than half of the world’s poorest nations are currently in debt distress or default.

Presented by Ed Butler, produced by Tom Kavanagh.

(Photo: Left-wing protesters in Buenos Aires carry a banner reading, “break with the IMF, don’t pay the debt”; Credit: Getty Images)

Transcript

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0:00.0

Today I want to talk about a topic that I think deserves more coverage.

0:04.2

The comb is back.

0:05.7

I doubted familiar.

0:07.6

The show that unpicks the stories that matter to you from all over Africa.

0:12.6

We are most affected by it.

0:14.7

We are the people that are growing up watching all these changes.

0:18.3

The comb from the BBC World Service.

0:20.5

Hey, they're talking to me.

0:22.8

Search for the comb wherever you get your podcasts.

0:26.6

Hi there, I'm Ed Butler.

0:28.6

Welcome to Business Daily from the BBC.

0:31.0

Today, one of Latin America's biggest economies is back in the mire.

0:35.8

Argentina has 50% inflation, rising joblessness and debts that it can't pay.

0:41.7

So why are some people saying it's all the fault of an international lender?

0:46.5

For many people in Argentina, the IMF is deeply associated with times of unrest

0:51.0

and cuts in government spending and austerity and very deep economic crisis.

0:56.0

Yes, today we are assessing Argentina's troubles, the role of the IMF,

1:01.0

and what all of this means for other indebted nations around the world.

1:05.0

If you go down to the 73 poorest countries, more than half of them, are in debt distress or default.

1:13.3

The IMF don't have the money to paper over everything forever.

1:17.5

That's all to come in Business Daily from the BBC.

1:21.8

My name is Agapita Kispe, from the other

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