As is its wont,
the IMF justifies its hard line on Argentina by placing full responsibility
for the disaster on government mismanagement and corruption. It insists that
Argentina must balance its fiscal budget, claiming that chronic deficits have
been at the root of the excessive run-up of hard currency debt that produced
the defaults. Indeed, to resume servicing that
debt so as to regain access to the global financial
markets, primary
fiscal surpluses were essential. Without the fiscal turnaround, the IMF argues,
additional credits would be throwing good money after bad. The new IMF prescription
of fiscal austerity and no capital controls makes little economic sense for
three reasons. First, it misreads the fiscal trajectory. From 1993 on, Argentina
ran a primary surplus every year but 1996, with primary spending--all fiscal
expenditure except on interest payments--representing a slightly declining
percent of GDP. Rising interest payments that overtook the primary surpluses
are what caused overall fiscal deficits to surge after 1996. During most of
President Menem's last three years in office, increased borrowing was mainly
responsible for the rising interest bill. But the IMF made no overt effort
then to discourage the borrowing. Instead, the alacrity with which it came
through with new credits during tight spots partly reassured the increasingly
nervous financial markets that payments would be protected.
It was during the latter half of the recent de la Rúa/Cavallo era that
the IMF became reluctant to lend. The timing coincided with near universal
consensus in the financial markets that Cavallo's effort to overcome peso
overvaluation with tighter monetary-fiscal measures was tanking the economy
to a politically explosive degree. It also coincided with the Bush administration
signaling the IMF to cut back because it was convinced that IMF bailouts merely
encouraged overborrowing and overlending. Risk premiums on Argentine paper
ballooned, making default inevitable.
The tanking and default might have been averted had the IMF supported President
de la Rúa's initial intent to loosen fiscal-monetary policy to revive
the economy, on the condition that it be accompanied by a peso devaluation
and debt workout. Instead the IMF helped deepen the disaster by backing the
policy triad long after it had become counterproductive. It bears partial
responsibility for the consequences.
Second, elementary macroeconomics tells us that imposing still more fiscal
austerity on an already deeply depressed economy, as the IMF persisted in
doing to Argentina, can push unemployment and bankruptcies to politically
explosive levels. For IMF Executive Director Horst Koehler to throw up his
hands at the Argentines' loss of faith in their political system, declaring
it to be "the most difficult problem" impeding IMF assistance, is
disingenuous. The IMF had pressured the leaders of each of the two major political
parties, the Radicals and the Peronists, to replace the recovery programs
they had promised the voters with harsher austerity soon after gaining office.
The lost faith and political chaos that ensued should hardly surprise.
Third, it insults the intelligence of foreign investors to assume they would
plunge back in en masse were further austerity to succeed in squeezing a budget
surplus from the deeply depressed and politically demoralized country. Indeed,
it may insult the intelligence of the IMF operatives to assume they really
believe the economic rationalization they offer for the Fund's harshness toward
Argentina. It seems more reasonable to assume that the chief motive has been
to punish Argentina, as a warning to others not to default. This may be morally
reprehensible and in violation of the IMF's fiduciary responsibility under
Article 1 of its charter, the Bretton Woods Articles of Agreement, to assist
members in balance of payments distress on economically viable terms. But
at least it gives a rational gloss to the harsh treatment.