Many View
Some Financiers and Bondholders Say Offer to Settle Huge Debt Is Far Too Little
By Paul Blustein
Friday, March 4, 2005
In late 2001, during bloody riots, the Argentine government defaulted on about $100 billion in debt. The default was the biggest by any nation in history, and it plunged the economy into chaos, with millions falling into poverty and unemployment reaching nearly one-quarter of the workforce. Many Argentines are still struggling to recover from the fallout.
Now, however, Argentine is recovering, and it is seeking to reenter the global financial system after having cast itself out. The implications go well beyond
The government is completing a restructuring of its debt in which it offered new securities to hundreds of thousands of bondholders, ranging from Italian widows to
"The country is leaving the default behind," a triumphant President Nestor Kirchner told the nation's Congress.
That assertion is subject to challenge by international financiers and investors. Many of them are angry with the take-it-or-leave-it terms of this week's deal, which leaves bondholders with losses about twice as deep as the average settlement reached in previous sovereign defaults such as Russia's and Ecuador's.
Thrown into question in the process are some hoary financial principles. Countries that treat foreign creditors so shabbily are supposed to be doomed to stagnation for years, because investors and lenders presumably will shun nations that show little respect for property rights. But the boom that
It is not just that
The investors include foreign-based multinational companies such as Volkswagen. Eight months ago, the German automaker decided to spend $200 million on producing a new vehicle model and expanding capacity at its transmission plant in the industrial city of
"You can see just by opening the paper" that foreign firms are expanding in Argentina, said Viktor Klima, the head of Volkswagen's operations here, referring to a news article reporting that General Motors was investing in its plant in the city of
Other investors are Argentine. Aluar Aluminio Argentino SAIC, a major aluminum producer, is sinking $650 million in a two-year project to increase its capacity by about 44 percent to 400,000 tons a year. Eduardo Elsztain, the country's biggest real estate developer, has just opened a shopping center in
"It's been tough. We will have restrictions," he said. "But in terms of access to capital, what defines access? Greed. When opportunities look profitable, access to capital will be easy."
During the 1990s,
Today the government has no need to borrow from abroad because it has been running budget surpluses. That is attributable in part to soaring prices for soybeans, wheat and other commodities, which have fattened the country's export receipts and tax revenue. It is also partly attributable to the government's discipline in keeping a lid on the wages of public-sector employees. With the government treasury full, economic policymakers here can shrug off the threats by foreign money managers to boycott Argentine bonds.
The rules of global finance have by no means been repealed entirely.
Still, many in the financial community are upset over the ease with which
Objections Abroad
During a tour of foreign cities a few weeks ago to explain the offer, Finance Secretary Guillermo Nielsen was greeted by protests by investors. "Thievery," "coercion" and "extortion" are among the epithets that investors have used to describe the 32 cents-on-the-dollar value of the exchange.
In response, Argentine officials said that the deal was the most the country could reasonably afford, and those who rejected it faced the prospect of collecting nothing.
The Argentine stance has triggered a number of lawsuits from bondholders, some of whom have won judgments -- in
That helps explain why such a high percentage of creditors, worn down after receiving no payment on their bonds for three years, participated in the exchange despite their disgust with the terms. By reducing the outstanding number of bonds in default, the government has cleared the way for a new loan agreement with the IMF, an important consideration because a serious confrontation with the IMF would cost the country billions of dollars in international aid and throw it back into the pariah camp.
All this could have significant ramifications for the international system, by making future crises more likely, some policymakers and economists fear. Because the Argentine restructuring is likely to set a new benchmark for investor losses on loans to governments in Latin America,
Some on Wall Street see an even more dangerous precedent: Won't countries with large debt loads such as
Maybe so, but the idea that
Street Scavengers
The competition is fierce among the unemployed Argentines who descend on this city's streets at night, sifting through trash bags for recyclable items and castoff appliances.
"Are you working this block?" a woman with a young girl in tow asked a short middle-age man who was squashing a plastic bottle for sale to recyclers. Told that he and his children scavenge in the area every evening, the woman and the girl moved on forlornly in search of unclaimed garbage.
The ranks of these cartoneros (cardboard men) swelled into the tens of thousands after the default. To be sure, most Argentines have not been forced to join them. But the cartoneros' plight is emblematic of the fate that befell the country.
The rebound of the past couple of years has failed to improve the lot of ordinary Argentines to the point that they have recovered all of what they lost. Even for salaried workers who kept their jobs, real earnings -- that is, adjusted for inflation -- are still well below the 2001 level. Compared with the peak level of 1998, real wages are down 20 percent, according to data compiled by IDESA, a private think tank.
The problem stems in large part from the depreciation of the peso. With the Argentine currency now trading at about three to the dollar, instead of the one-for-one exchange rate that prevailed before, many goods tied to the dollar -- real estate, cars, electrical appliances -- are out of reach for many Argentines.
On the plus side, the cheap peso is one of the major factors attracting foreign manufacturers such as Volkswagen, which pays its workers an average of less than $6 an hour, including all fringe benefits -- just about the lowest wage in Volkswagen's operations worldwide, according to Klima.
But the diminution in living standards is all too perceptible to Antonio Delgado, who has worked as a nurse in public hospitals for 20 years and supplements his modest salary by working weekends at a private clinic, earning about 2,600 pesos ($870) a month.
The father of five, Delgado remembers the roaring 1990s fondly. He and his family could afford to feast regularly on the tenderest cuts of steak. He bought a 1992 Peugeot and a 1995, two-door Fiat, and the family flew on vacations to places like
Generation Disillusioned
The trauma is psychological as well, particularly for Argentines who were entering adulthood when the economy collapsed and have become profoundly unsettled about their futures. Dario Jinchuk, a government scientist, cited the example of his son, who stopped pursuing a degree in electrical engineering to study for a job as a chef because he couldn't see any engineering prospects. "A whole generation has become that way -- frustrated," said Jinchuk, who himself is seeking work abroad.
In view of such evidence, many economists scoff at claims that
The country suffered "massive social and economic pain with poverty and unemployment rates through the roof," said Nouriel Roubini, a professor at
To generate the growth required to reduce poverty significantly,
But in a move aimed at dashing such hopes, the Argentine Congress enacted a law last month prohibiting the government from paying a penny more. "We were very happy for this law to be passed," said Roberto Lavagna, the economy minister, who clearly sees little downside to such pugnacity.
"When I hear people say, '
Special correspondents Brian Byrnes and Mariano Melamed contributed to this report.
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Prudent Investor Comments
With Argentina succesfully dodging a comeuppance from the international financial community for its humungous debt default, the possibilty is that the Argentine model could be a precedent for any debt-laden emerging countries to go on a default. A case of Moral hazard?
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