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This Article is From Sep 25, 2019

Lagarde Defends IMF’s Argentina Effort as Doing ‘Best We Could’

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(Bloomberg) -- Christine Lagarde defended the International Monetary Fund's decision to give Argentina a record credit line last year even after the $56 billion program fell short of stabilizing the nation's troubled economy.

“We did the best we could at the time when Argentinian leaders came to us with a very difficult situation,” the former IMF managing director and soon to be European Central Bank chief told Francine Lacqua in an interview with Bloomberg Television in New York.

President Mauricio Macri sought IMF support in May 2018, when a currency crisis threatened the market-friendly reforms he introduced after 12 years of protectionism under his predecessors. The unprecedented level of financial support was notable since many Argentines still blame IMF policies for leading to the country's 2001 economic crisis.

Despite the Fund's efforts this time, Argentina's economy never found solid footing. Data showing it was finally emerging from recession quickly became obsolete after Macri's shocking defeat in a Aug. 11 primary vote sent local markets tumbling. Poverty, unemployment and inflation continue rising and Argentines are now bracing for a third year of economic contraction.

Scapegoat

Lagarde says the IMF is often unfairly blamed when things go awry.

“This is the fate of the institution, to be the scapegoat when things go wrong,” she said. “The IMF always gets a tough time whenever a program is moderately successful or not successful, and it is never mentioned when a program is superbly successful.”

Lagarde Says Global Recession Unlikely But Trade a Key Risk

Lagarde said the IMF deal was accomplishing its goals of reducing external vulnerabilities and the fiscal deficit before things went off the rails due to a “political development.”

She underscored that provisions were in place to shield those most vulnerable from the pains of austerity.

“We had anticipated that it would hurt,” she said, adding that the deal included instruments “that could actually be activated in order to increase safety measures for the most vulnerable people.”

The IMF continues to engage with Argentine officials, the Fund's Acting Managing Director David Lipton said in a statement on Tuesday, after meeting Macri in New York. He added that the government's recent measures “have helped calm the markets.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Patrick Gillespie in Buenos Aires at pgillespie29@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Juan Pablo Spinetto at jspinetto@bloomberg.net, Walter Brandimarte

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

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