Javier Milei has so far succeeded in making drastic changes to Argentina’s economic policies. In this episode we evaluate what has worked and what hasn’t, and who have been the winners and losers. Milei’s deep spending cuts have produced in the first 5 months of 2024 a primary fiscal surplus of 1.1% of GDP and inflation is down to about 4% a month. Poverty however continues to rise and the IMF projects an economic contraction of 3,5% for 2024. What do these results amount to in terms of real improvement to the economy? What challenges remain? And what are the most likely political and economic outcomes of Milei’s policies? Our guest is Eduardo Levy Yeyati, a former chief economist of the Central Bank of Argentina, and currently a professor at the School of Government at Torcuato di Tella University in Buenos Aires. He also discusses the need for a revival of centrist politics in Latin America.
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On this episode:
Eduardo Levy Yeyati is professor at the School of Government at Torcuato di Tella University in Buenos Aires. He is a member of AQ’s editorial board.
Brian Winter is the editor-in-chief of Americas Quarterly.
If you’d like to know more:
Imagining a Centrist Revival in Latin America by Mauricio Càrdenas and Eduardo Levy Yeyati