Since July of 2018, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has disbursed more than $20 billion of a $56.3 billion loan package to Argentina. The Argentine government is now the largest holder of the IMF's General Resources Account (GRA) funds. This paper looks at how the policies that the Fund and the Argentine government have agreed upon in their June Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) are expected to lead to an economic recovery; and whether they are likely to succeed
In January 2002, the Argentine government announced it would default on $141 billion in public secto...
This report examines the International Monetary Fund's (IMF) projections for economic growth for Arg...
When Argentine sovereign default in December 2001 led to a collapse of the peso, the burden of dolla...
This paper examines Argentina's current economic expansion, which is now more than five and a half y...
After more than a year of negotiations with the IMF, the Argentine government got an agreement signe...
Artículo de revistaThe Argentine economy is in a complicated transition phase. To correct the major ...
En primer lugar, este trabajo se refiere a los programas de Argentina con el FMI entre 1956 y 2020; ...
The Fund has already produced an evaluation of the lessons that could be drawn from the crisis in Ar...
In this paper I review the main features of the Argentine economic recovery that took place after th...
Since its inception in 1945, the goal of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has been to prevent ...
After returning to financial markets in 2016, Argentina asked for IMF financing in 2018 and defaulte...
This paper offers a comprehensive look at how Argentina managed a remarkable economic recovery from ...
UnrestrictedIn a span of ten years (1991-2001), Argentina underwent a boom and bust cycle. In the ea...
Argentina experienced moderate growth rates during the import substitution industrialization strateg...
There seems to be no end to the sovereign debt woes of Argentina in the near future, as the ‘holdout...
In January 2002, the Argentine government announced it would default on $141 billion in public secto...
This report examines the International Monetary Fund's (IMF) projections for economic growth for Arg...
When Argentine sovereign default in December 2001 led to a collapse of the peso, the burden of dolla...
This paper examines Argentina's current economic expansion, which is now more than five and a half y...
After more than a year of negotiations with the IMF, the Argentine government got an agreement signe...
Artículo de revistaThe Argentine economy is in a complicated transition phase. To correct the major ...
En primer lugar, este trabajo se refiere a los programas de Argentina con el FMI entre 1956 y 2020; ...
The Fund has already produced an evaluation of the lessons that could be drawn from the crisis in Ar...
In this paper I review the main features of the Argentine economic recovery that took place after th...
Since its inception in 1945, the goal of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has been to prevent ...
After returning to financial markets in 2016, Argentina asked for IMF financing in 2018 and defaulte...
This paper offers a comprehensive look at how Argentina managed a remarkable economic recovery from ...
UnrestrictedIn a span of ten years (1991-2001), Argentina underwent a boom and bust cycle. In the ea...
Argentina experienced moderate growth rates during the import substitution industrialization strateg...
There seems to be no end to the sovereign debt woes of Argentina in the near future, as the ‘holdout...
In January 2002, the Argentine government announced it would default on $141 billion in public secto...
This report examines the International Monetary Fund's (IMF) projections for economic growth for Arg...
When Argentine sovereign default in December 2001 led to a collapse of the peso, the burden of dolla...