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Argentina reportedly to devalue peso

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Posted 10:20AM on Thursday 3rd January 2002 ( 22 years ago )
BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA - New President Eduardo Duhalde was putting together his Cabinet on Thursday, as reports said one of the government&#39;s first decisions would be to devalue the peso by as much as 40 percent. <br> <br> Duhalde, 60 and a veteran of the Peronist Party&#39;s left-leaning, populist wing, took office Wednesday as Argentina&#39;s fifth president in two weeks, hinting he would veer away from the free-market economic policies he blames for his country&#39;s ruin. <br> <br> The new leader - who promised a ``program of national salvation&#39;&#39; - was to name his Cabinet on Thursday, and it appeared he was drawing heavily from the Peronist party and the business sector, with a few posts going to the opposition. <br> <br> Buenos Aires Gov. Carlos Ruckauf, a Peronist heavyweight, said he had been chosen as foreign minister and economist Jorge Remes Lenicov would be economy minister. <br> <br> Remes Lenicov, a Peronist, was economy minister of Buenos Aires province from 1989 to 1997. In the past, he has shied away from the International Monetary Fund-recommended recipe for development - austerity policies, unbridled markets and international free trade. <br> <br> Industrialist Jose de Mendiguren was to be minister for production, while Jorge Capitanich, a young economist who last week served for 48 hours as economy minister, would be chief of Cabinet, the Clarin and La Nacion newspapers reported, citing unnamed sources. <br> <br> One of the first moves expected from the new government was an emergency law to allow the devaluation of the peso, anchored at one-to-one to the dollar by legislation passed in 1991. <br> <br> Media reports said the new government would initially fix a new exchange rate of between 1.30 and 1.40 to the dollar for the next 90 days. <br> <br> During that period, Clarin reported the government would try to negotiate a $15 billion aid package with the IMF. <br> <br> For financial and commercial transactions, the peso would then be floated against a basket of currencies including the dollar, the euro and the real of neighboring Brazil, Argentina&#39;s biggest export market, the business newspaper BAE reported. <br> <br> The dollar peg at first brought price stability and a boom in foreign investment, but it has been blamed more recently for making industry less competitive and deepening a four-year slump. <br> <br> The dogged defense of the peg by former Economy Minister Domingo Cavallo cost Argentina the support of the IMF, which cut a $1.3 billion lifeline on Dec. 5. <br> <br> With its national accounts in chaos in late December, Argentina suspended payments on the share of its massive $132 billion public debt held by foreign investors. <br> <br> To assuage Argentines enraged by a partial bank freeze that limits cash withdrawals from their accounts to $1,000 a month, the government was expected to announce a 180-day timetable for deposits to be returned, Clarin reported. <br> <br> Duhalde promised Tuesday that deposits would be returned in whatever currency - dollars or pesos - they had been made in. <br> <br> There would be a special plan to allow Argentines to pay off their dollar-denominated debts in pesos, according to BAE. Clarin said electricity, gas, water and telephone bills, currently written in dollars, would also be transferred to pesos. <br> <br> On Wednesday, groups of drum-banging, flag-waving Duhalde supporters took to the streets to celebrate. <br> <br> But some Argentines were skeptical, noting that Duhalde was known for big spending during his two terms as Buenos Aires governor from 1991 to 1999. <br> <br> Although it is Argentina&#39;s richest and most populous province - home to a third of the country&#39;s 36 million people and producing a third of the economy&#39;s output, the province ran a deficit for all but two of those years. <br> <br> Provincial debt rocketed from about $2 billion to $4.6 billion at the end of 2000, at the peso&#39;s current one-to-one rate. Duhalde has defended public outlays, saying the needs of the poor come first.

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