Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Argentina returns to its sad economic past
Argentina returns to its sad economic past
Sep 13, 2025 8:19 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
Conference: Free Markets, Solidarity, and Sustainability
The Markets, Culture, and Ethics Project’s Third International Colloquium on Christian Humanism in Economics and Business, “Free Markets with Solidarity and Sustainability: Facing the Challenge” conference ing up this October 22-23 at the Catholic University of America in Washington DC. Academic conferences do not necessarily strive to be attractive or inviting (13 word titles and 13 letter words aren’t really all that “catchy”). But I would encourage anyone who is in the area or who is willing to make the...
Demographic Winter is Coming
I was a guest on today’s Coffee & Markets podcast, where we discussed plex challenges facing America as reflected in recent demographic trends. What do declining birthrates across the developed world indicate? For one thing, they show that crises are not limited to one feature of our lives and there are important spillover causes and effects across social spaces. So financial crises have impacts on the home, and vice versa. Or as I wrote last year, “Healthy and vibrant economies...
Baptists vs. Obama’s HHS
Louisiana College, a Baptist school in Pineville, La., is the most recent institution to file a lawsuit over the Obama administration’s contraception mandate. Kathryn Jean Lopez interviewed the the school’s president, Joe Aguillard, about the decision to sue the government: LOPEZ: The president contended last week that there is promise. So why would you sue? AGUILLARD: Any repeated claim that the government promised is recycled nonsense. The HHS mandate will force us to cover abortion pills in our health plans...
Equipping Our Country to Overcome Malaise: Review of ‘Defending the Free Market’
Rev. Robert Sirico’s book ‘Defending the Free Market’ has a review in today”s Washington Times. It notes the timely aspects of the book, given the ing presidential election: As the presidential race centers on America’s economic woes, President Obama and many of his supporters depict capitalism as a system that allows greedy CEOs and Wall Street insiders to profit atthe expense of mon good. Increased government regulation is their proposed solution for checking corruption and standing up for the rights...
You Didn’t Kill That Business On Your Own
After relating how city regulations in Chattanooga, Tenn., helped kill a small business, economist Mark J. Perry offers a sympathetic sentiment for failed entrepreneurs: To paraphrase President Obama: Look, if you’ve been unsuccessful, you didn’t get there on your own. If you were unsuccessful at opening or operating a small business, some government official along the line probably contributed to your failure. There was an overzealous civil servant somewhere who might have stood in your way with unreasonable regulations that...
Did Jesus Support a 100% Tax Rate?
“She must not have any friends,” my wife says all too frequently. “Because if she did they wouldn’t let her go out dressed like that.” Although the cattiness of ment always makes me cringe, my wife does have a point. One of the roles friends play in our lives is to prevent us from embarrassing ourselves in public. Editors play a similar role, though they are not as beloved as friends—at least by writers. One of our most essential functions...
ResearchLinks – 08.24.12
Book Review: “Ferguson on Green, Pauper Capital” David R. Green. Pauper Capital. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate, 2010. Reviewed by Christopher Ferguson (Auburn University) The Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834, monly known as the New Poor Law, is arguably the most notorious piece of legislation in British history. Deeply controversial in its day, it has unsurprisingly generated a dense and diverse scholarly literature ever since, yet one in which the national capital has played a remarkably minor role. Indeed, David R....
Presidential Campaigns and Soul Revival
“As Secularism Advances, Political Messianism Draws More Believers” is mentary for this week. So much can be said about religion and presidential campaigns but for this piece I wanted to elevate some important truths about virtue and discernment in our society today. Here’s a quote from the piece: Worries about religious imagery in campaigns and Messianic overtones are warranted especially if these religious expressions replace a vibrant spirituality in churches and houses of worship across America. If spiritual discernment and...
Small-town Paul Ryan: Defender of Subsidiarity
As I leafed through this week’s Wall Street Journal Europe mentary, I finally felt a little redemption. Hats off to WSJ writers Peter Nicholas and Mark Peter whose brief, but poignant August 20 article “Ryan’s Catholic Roots Reach Deep” shed light on vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan’s value system. This was done by elucidating how Paul Ryan views the relationship of the individual with the state and how the local, small-town forces in America can produce great change for a...
GQ, ArtPrize and ‘Flyover Country’
At the Mackinac Center blog, I look at a really shabby piece of reportage in GQ Magazine on ArtPrize, the annual public petition in Grand Rapids, Mich. Grand Rapids is also where the Acton Institute is based and it’s a terrific Midwestern city doing a lot of things right. But when East Coast writer Matthew Power visited GR he saw only “flyover country,” a “provincial” mindset, “G.R.-usalem” (lots of churches) and “ordinary” local inhabitants. You know where this is going....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved