Argentina posts first budget surplus in over a decade

0
Argentina posts first budget surplus in over a decade

The result follows the introduction of austerity measures by President Javier Milei

Argentina has recorded its first annual budget surplus in more than a decade, a year after President Javier Milei assumed office and applied shock therapy to try to stabilize the country’s economy.

The financial surplus for 2024 totaled 1.76 trillion pesos (roughly $4.5 billion), the equivalent of 0.3% of the country’s GDP, the Economy Ministry said in a statement on Friday. It was the first such result since 2010, it added.

In 2022 and 2023, Argentina’s fiscal deficit stood at 2.4% and 2.9% of GDP respectively. Inflation was at over 211% in 2023, the highest since the early 1990s, according to official data. The country also recorded a recession in 2023 and the first two quarters of 2024.

President Milei, a libertarian economist known for his controversial policies, has pushed for deep austerity measures to address Argentina’s economic crisis.

He devalued the national currency by 52%, laid off more than 33,000 public sector workers, and slashed state subsidies on transport, fuel and energy, among other measures.

“Zero deficit is a reality,” Milei said on social media. “Promises are fulfilled.”

Over the course of the last year, inflation peaked at nearly 300% in April and then recorded a steady decline, arriving at 117.8% in December.

Official statistics also revealed last month that Argentina came out of recession in the July-to-September quarter of last year, posting a 3.9% increase in GDP.

Economy Minister Luis Caputo emphasized the government’s commitment to maintaining fiscal discipline in 2025.

International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva has praised Argentina’s economic achievements.

In a post on X following a meeting with Milei on Sunday, Georgieva described the country’s progress as a “remarkable transformation.” The IMF chief highlighted the elimination of the fiscal deficit, declining inflation, and improving economic growth prospects.

The IMF approved a $57 billion bailout for Argentina in 2018, the largest loan package in the organization’s history at the time.


READ MORE: South American state to dissolve tax authority

Milei’s austerity measures have proved divisive at home, where the policies tipped an additional 5 million people into poverty in the first half of 2024, the Buenos Aires Times noted on Monday.

Argentina saw a series of protests against Milei’s economic policies last year. The unrest culminated in violent clashes in June, when the Argentine Senate narrowly approved Milei’s reform package.

Comments are closed.