An economics, investment, trading and policy blog with a focus on Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). We seek the truth, avoid the mainstream and are virulently anti-neoliberalism.
what's the deal my last comment posted immediately? it reads at the top "it may take a moment for your comment to appear" not sure if i did something wrong before or what. i posted twice and had the same result - no comment posted
I had a flash of sliver of thought about Argentina during the 1990's -
In addition to the pegged currency policy, I am wondering if they were going through some sort of deficit cutting and debt relieving puritanical phase ?
They sold the water, electricity, toll road, and other municipal utilities. They must have done something to attract tons and tons of private investment ( which later cratered ). The monies received lined Menem's pockets and the richest families, but maybe ...
did they "balance the budget" in the domain of Argentine Federal treasury with the proceeds ?
did this present the false confidence in investor attraction to the neoliberal Argentine 1990's ?
By balancing the budget it only moved the bubble firmly into the real economy of Argentina and there was no Federal domain to offset and take the shock when the pop came.
The shock absorber would have been the currency fluctuation as well as government elastic monetary policy - instead they had to default.
Can anyone find out if Argentina balanced their "federal" economy to present false spreadsheets to the world so as to falsely attract investors, etc ???
this could show that deficits would have been better.
5 comments:
why are my comments taking so long to post? I commented 30 min ago on another post and my post has still not displayed. am i being moderated? :-)
what's the deal my last comment posted immediately? it reads at the top "it may take a moment for your comment to appear" not sure if i did something wrong before or what. i posted twice and had the same result - no comment posted
never mind. third time is a charm. it posted immediately
@ TOM :
I had a flash of sliver of thought about Argentina during the 1990's -
In addition to the pegged currency policy, I am wondering if they were going through some sort of deficit cutting and debt relieving puritanical phase ?
They sold the water, electricity, toll road, and other municipal utilities. They must have done something to attract tons and tons of private investment ( which later cratered ). The monies received lined Menem's pockets and the richest families, but maybe ...
did they "balance the budget" in the domain of Argentine Federal treasury with the proceeds ?
did this present the false confidence in investor attraction to the neoliberal Argentine 1990's ?
By balancing the budget it only moved the bubble firmly into the real economy of Argentina and there was no Federal domain to offset and take the shock when the pop came.
The shock absorber would have been the currency fluctuation as well as government elastic monetary policy - instead they had to default.
Can anyone find out if Argentina balanced their "federal" economy to present false spreadsheets to the world so as to falsely attract investors, etc ???
this could show that deficits would have been better.
I always like Harvey's stuff. His writing is clear and straightforward...
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