The article is mostly accurate describing the causes of the
problems in Argentina although it does keep in mind to forget to mention a key
element such as the role of the IMF and the same old multinational corporations
that always seem to float around when countries fall apart. With a bit of bigotry
it pokes fun at how Argentines cook food, and takes a few shots at Spain and Italy
while failing to mention the serious economic and sociopolitical problems
Britain has itself.
Argentina should serve as an example of what not to do.
Still, many developed nations are repeating the same model, and because of a
few “cosmetic” differences here and there most don’t seem to realize they are
being dragged down the same miserable path. After all, in which country is it
that 14 year olds keep get pregnant so as to get a council flat and benefits?
And lets better not mention lying politicians blaming the weather for decades flood
protection infrastructure neglect.
FerFAL
The parable of Argentina
There are lessons for many
governments from one country’s 100 years of decline
A CENTURY ago, when Harrods decided to set up its first overseas
emporium, it chose Buenos Aires. In 1914 Argentina stood out as the
country of the future. Its economy had grown faster than America’s over
the previous four decades. Its GDP per head was higher than Germany’s,
France’s or Italy’s. It boasted wonderfully fertile agricultural land, a
sunny climate, a new democracy (universal male suffrage was introduced
in 1912), an educated population and the world’s most erotic dance.
Immigrants tangoed in from everywhere. For the young and ambitious, the
choice between Argentina and California was a hard one.There are still many things to love about Argentina, from the glorious wilds of Patagonia to the world’s best footballer, Lionel Messi. The Argentines remain perhaps the best-looking people on the planet. But their country is a wreck. Harrods closed in 1998. Argentina is once again at the centre of an emerging-market crisis. This one can be blamed on the incompetence of the president, Cristina Fernández, but she is merely the latest in a succession of economically illiterate populists, stretching back to Juan and Eva (Evita) Perón, and before. Forget about competing with the Germans. The Chileans and Uruguayans, the locals Argentines used to look down on, are now richer. Children from both those countries—and Brazil and Mexico too—do better in international education tests.
Why dwell on a single national tragedy? When people consider the worst
that could happen to their country, they think of totalitarianism. Given
communism’s failure, that fate no longer seems likely. If Indonesia
were to boil over, its citizens would hardly turn to North Korea as a
model; the governments in Madrid or Athens are not citing Lenin as the
answer to their euro travails. The real danger is inadvertently becoming
the Argentina of the 21st century. Slipping casually into steady
decline would not be hard. Extremism is not a necessary ingredient, at
least not much of it: weak institutions, nativist politicians, lazy
dependence on a few assets and a persistent refusal to confront reality
will do the trick.
(continue reading)
2 comments:
1) Beneath its façade of journalism, the Economist is really a propaganda outlet for the same predatory Neoliberalism that enslaved Argentina and which is bleeding the USA.
2) Notice how the Economist is careful to give no FACTS re who ran up Argentina's huge debt nor who grabbed Argentina's national treasures--and then sold them to foreigners to move capital out of the country. Most of all, no facts re where the money went and into whose accounts.
I live in California and have always found the Economist to be 100% correct in its analysis of the state's government and economy. This article agrees with everything else I've every read about Argentina.
One area where the Economist is pathetically wrong is gun control. But I'd say it is very good on business and government.
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