December 22, 2024
Argentine President-elect Javier Milei says one piece of his dramatic campaign will take place, even as he names moderates to key posts in his administration. On Friday, the Libertarian populist issued a statement saying that closing the central bank of Argentina was a  "non-negotiable matter" and that citizens should ignore...

Argentine President-elect Javier Milei says one piece of his dramatic campaign will take place, even as he names moderates to key posts in his administration.

On Friday, the Libertarian populist issued a statement saying that closing the central bank of Argentina was a  “non-negotiable matter” and that citizens should ignore “false rumors” to the contrary, according to Reuters.

But while that radical pledge appears on track, Milei is filling his Cabinet with moderates.

Instead of a close ally, Milei has named economist Osvaldo Giordano to lead Argentina’s social security administration, which is likely to be a centerpiece of Milei’s call for spending cuts.

Milei had called for dollarization of the economy.

Trending:

Pro-Palestinian Protesters Rush Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade Route, Learn Humiliating Lesson When Floats Refuse to Stop

However, Emilio Ocampo, an advocate of dollarization who was part of Milei’s campaign, is no longer part of Milei’s team, even though Milei had said during the campaign Ocampo would lead Argentina’s central bank, according to Bloomberg.

In October, Miei said the Argentine peso was worth “less than excrement” and “blowing up” the central bank was necessary.

Milei said in a Wednesday interview that although he liked Ocampo’s plan, “we need to see whether the market situation allows a solution like the one Emilio proposes, and whether he is prepared to implement a plan which is not the one he had originally planned,” according to the Financial Times.

Ocampo rejected leading the central bank, the Financial Times reported, citing a source it did not name

Should the U.S. get rid of the central bank?

Yes: 100% (2 Votes)

No: 0% (0 Votes)

“The only reason for Ocampo to be at the [central bank] was to dollarize. He was never going to the central bank to implement someone else’s plan, which he doesn’t agree with,” the source said.

Bloomberg said Milei named two former Wall Street veterans to lead his economic team — Luis Caputo and Demian Reidel. Both had been part of Argentina’s government from 2015 to 2019.

Some experts had said the idea of dollarization was at variance with Argentina’s reality, according to The New York Times.

“Dollarizing won’t be possible, at least immediately,” Santiago Bulat, an Argentine economist, said, adding that nations such as Ecuador that tried it found that dollarization was not a magic bullet for the economy.

“Ecuador dollarized, yes, in a very critical situation. But now they depend on the United States’ monetary policies. They defaulted twice in 20 years,” he said.

Related:

Libertarian Trump Fan Wins Stunning Victory in Argentina’s Presidential Election

Caputo said, though, that change is coming, according to Reuters.

“Our approach is fiscal and monetary shock from day one. The roadmap is orthodox and without crazy things,” Caputo told a meeting of bankers, Reuters said it was told by a banking source it did not name.

Argentina’s economy is currently battling annual inflation estimated at 150 percent.


An Urgent Note from Our Staff:

The Western Journal has been labeled “dangerous” simply because we have a biblical worldview and speak the truth about what is happening in America.

We refuse to let Big Tech and woke advertisers dictate the content we share with our community. We stand for truth. We stand for freedom. We stand with our readers.

We’re asking you to help us in this fight. We can’t do this without you.

Your donation directly helps fund our editorial team of writers and editors. If you would rather become a WJ member outright, you can do that today as well. Your support means we can continue to expose false narratives and defend traditional American values.

Please stand with us by donating today.

Thank you for your support!