Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Argentina returns to its sad economic past
Argentina returns to its sad economic past
Nov 22, 2025 1:05 PM

Back in 2015, Mauricio Macri became president of Argentina. He inherited an economy in ruins and a society teetering on the edge of despair after 12 years rule by Peronist populists: first President Nestor Kirchner followed by his wife, Cristina.

Visiting Argentina just after Macri’s election, I was struck by how many Argentines believed that Macri represented a chance for real change. One Buenos Aires politician told me that she believed that Argentina now had a proper opportunity—perhaps, she said, its last—to break out of the cycle of economic dysfunctionality that has dominated the country since the 1930s.

Almost four years later, I suspect that few Argentines still think that way. On September 2, for example, President Macri reinstated capital controls. This was a reversal of one of the very first policy measures which he implemented to help open up the country to market disciplines and move beyond yet another period of Peronist failure.

A recent Wall Street Journal article provided a good summary of Macri’s policy in this area:

The capital controls require the central bank to limit dollar sales, panies and banks to have obtain authorization to purchase hard currency. The country’s Exporters now have to repatriate all hard currency from sales abroad. Individuals seeking to buy dollars will have a limit of $10,000 a month. Bank transfers abroad by individuals will also face a monthly limit of $10,000. Dollar purchases by nonresidents will be restricted to $1,000 a month, and they won’t be allowed to make bank transfers abroad.

The ostensive purpose of these capital controls is try and obstruct the Argentine peso from experiencing an out-of-control depreciation. The controls are being presented as a short-term measure that will be dispensed with once the Argentine economy stabilizes.

The cost, however, will be very high in terms of basic economic freedoms. Capital controls will also act as a major deterrent to foreign investment and push many Argentines into an already thriving black market for currency exchange.

Another problem is that the new capital controls go hand-in-hand with a return to many of the failed interventionist policies of the past that Macri came to office with a view to abandoning. More recently, Macri froze prices on basic food and gasoline to help the country address its annual inflation rate of 55 percent. Given, however, the crucial role played by free prices in conveying essential information concerning the real price of goods and services, the negative impact upon consumers and producers will be considerable.

Argentina’s Minister of Finance, Hernán Lacunza, isn’t especially enthusiastic about his nation’s reembrace of interventionist policies. He thinks, however, they are needed to prevent even greater problems. Nonetheless, Lacunza admits, “These aren’t measures for a normal country.”

Lacunza’s words reminded me of a conversation which I had with an Argentine priest from Buenos Aires during my last visit to that beautiful but tortured nation. “All we want,” the priest said, “is to live in a normal country.”

Argentina is the premier example of a once wealthy country which has managed to e a universal synonym for perpetual economic decline, corruption, and persistent failure. And despite many Latin Americans’ bad habit of blaming the rest of the world—especially the big, bad United States—for the region’s seemingly endless problems, Argentina’s wounds are for the most part self-inflicted. Choices by Argentine legislators and Argentine governments voted into power by Argentine citizens are a major reason, if not the primary reason, why Argentina seems unable to attain normalcy.

Until that basic political fact is acknowledged and addressed, I fear that Argentina will remain locked into the self-destructive habits and patterns of the past from which the country seems unable to emerge. The rich and powerful will be able to look after themselves. Argentina’s poor, however, will not.

(Featured image: CC by 2.5)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Give thanks for economic efficiency
A grasp of how basic economics contributes to human flourishing in astonishing ways gives the so-called dismal science a whole new luster. Read More… I have never been to an event or cocktail party where raising the issue of economic efficiency engendered a particularly emotional discussion or any level of enthusiasm. I have never been to a Thanksgiving dinner table where someone gave thanks for GDP growth. I suspect this may happen in the economic departments of a few universities...
Xi Jinping manipulates history on his way to a third term
Is Xi a second great Red Emperor? His growing influence and use of raw power even to rewrite history seem to suggest so. Read More… China’s Xi Jinping has already served longer than any U.S. president other than Franklin Delano Roosevelt. And Xi is likely to pass FDR in just a couple years. The Chinese president and Chinese Communist Party general secretary has secured the support necessary for a third term—expected to be followed by a fourth and even fifth...
Practicing prudence and gratitude in the age of COVID
Too many conservatives are rejecting the gift of the COVID vaccines out of hand, which itself is very unconservative. Read More… When COVID hit Italy so badly back in the winter of 2020, I recall praying hard that a vaccine could be developed, as quickly as possible, so that the kind of devastation that a worldwide pandemic can induce would be avoided. As a classical liberal who spends a lot of time trying to convince people that things are actually...
Finding a community of faith in The Bishop’s Wife
The classic Cary Grant film still has much to offer as a meditation on the true meaning of Christmas and how pride often interferes with the accepting of gifts. Read More… I try to write every year on old Christmas movies, and this year I’m doing an entire series on ’40s movies remade in the ’90s, which suggests we can bring back some of those heartwarming stories. So I give you The Bishop’s Wife (1947): a Christian fairy tale typical...
The forgotten victims of COVID-19: 7 groups punished by lockdowns
The pandemic’s trail of destruction reaches far further than the death toll of the virus. Read More… COVID-19 is the most deadly global pandemic since the 1918 influenza outbreak, claiming more than 5 million lives worldwide and counting. Well over 700,000 of these deaths occurred in the United States, which parable to the number of lives lost in the American Civil War. Yet the pandemic’s trail of destruction reaches even further than this death toll. Millions of Americans have suffered...
Episode of ‘The Simpsons’ is erased from Disney+ lineup in Hong Kong
An episode of the wildly popular animated series will not be available to Disney+ subscribers in Hong Kong owing to a crackdown on any form of anti-CCP dissent—even from cartoon characters. Read More… The streaming service Disney + made its long-awaited debut in Hong Kong this month, although with one episode from an extremely popular TV series missing. An episode from The Simpsons, which ridicules Chinese government leadership and pokes fun at the nation’s censorship of any mention of the...
Negotiating “The Captive Mind” on American campuses
What does an ancient Islamic concept have to do with negotiating woke campuses in 2021? A Nobel Prize–winning Pole proves a fascinating guide. Read More… God being dead, Nietzsche warned us, meant that new gods had to be created to fill the void. Our age is godless in some ways, to be sure, but in other ways we have e polytheists with jealous peting for our allegiances. Just as Fate ruled over the gods in ancient Greece, so in the...
Planes, Trains, and Thanksgiving
What does a edy starring Steve Martin and John Candy have to teach us about an America divided? Maybe everything. Read More… Thanksgiving is a distinctively American holiday, unlike Christmas, and yet we have very few popular movies about it. Maybe this is a good thing—it’s a family affair, not necessarily a public spectacle. But it might be a bad thing—there’s something about giving thanks that we don’t quite grasp and it might be that nobody feels up to the...
Advent: Dig deep for freedom, liberty, and love
Advent is a season often neglected as we rush to Christmas morning. But take time to consider what it is we are anticipating and how we should give thanks along the way. Read More… Christmas is a busy season for the entrepreneur, the business owner, and the worker. There are the demands of production, the management of the supply chain (a significant problem in the contemporary business world), and the need to sell products, especially so if they are seasonal....
Religion in the public square strengthens public discourse
Robert Wuthnow’s new book demonstrates that religion has provided, not a moral majority, but innumerable moral minorities that uphold free expression and a vibrant culture of dissent. Read More… Religious expression in the public square is currently challenged by peting concerns. On the left, some worry that religion is an anti-rational monolith, quietly subverting legitimate expressions of democracy. Others, on the right, worry that religious diversity destroys cultural cohesion, which they see as necessary to democracy. In his latest book,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved