86
Argentina The economy will recover gradually from the financial market turmoil in 2018. A strong currency depreciation has exacerbated high inflation, denting real incomes and investor confidence. Contractive macroeconomic policies and policy uncertainty in the run-up to the October 2019 elections will weigh on the recovery of domestic demand. However, exports will continue to lead the economy out of the recession, supported by the weaker real exchange rate and a strong harvest, although their strength will be severely limited by slow world trade growth. Unemployment is projected not to recede before 2020. A large and appropriate fiscal consolidation is under way to achieve a primary fiscal surplus in 2020. Monetary policy will remain tight to fight persistently high inflation. Sticking to the announced targets will be crucial to restore confidence, but agreed fiscal room to cushion the social impact of the recession should be used as needed. Reducing barriers to competition and foreign trade is key to stronger growth. The economy is in recession, but vulnerabilities are being reduced During 2018, several bouts of capital flight and a weather-related decline in agricultural export revenues triggered a sharp depreciation of the currency, causing significant confidence losses and plunging the economy into recession. Macroeconomic policies responded swiftly with a more frontloaded fiscal consolidation and tight monetary policy. Fiscal and external accounts are already improving visibly, thus reducing imbalances and associated vulnerabilities. At the same time, the exchange rate has remained volatile in recent months and consumer confidence and retail sales have declined. Unemployment remains high at 9.1%, almost 2 percentage points above end-2017.
Argentina Fiscal and external balances are improving
The exchange rate has depreciated and inflation remains high
% of GDP 2 1
Y-o-y % changes 55 Fiscal balance¹
ARS per USD 12
← Headline inflation Exchange rate, inverted scale →
Current account balance¹
0
48
19
41
26
34
33
27
40
-1 -2 -3 -4 -5 -6 -7
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
0
20
2017
2018
47
1. Four-quarter moving average. Source: INDEC; Ministry of Economy; CEIC; and Refinitiv. StatLink 2 https://doi.org/10.1787/888933933995
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2019 ISSUE 1: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2019