Argentina's Economic Crisis: Exploring the Potential of BRICS Membership

 

Argentina's Economic Crisis: Exploring the Potential of BRICS Membership
Argentina President Albert Fernandez
Image Credit: Google

Argentina is passing through toughest of the times the country has ever witnessed. An Economic Crisis with the inflation rates surged 100 percent in historic spike and poverty hovering close to 40 percent. The country is grappling with $44.5 billion International Monetary Fund’s (IMF’s) debt.

The question that raises here whether Argentina would embrace membership of BRICS under these circumstances?

The alliance represents the two major adversaries of United States, China and Russia along other members Brazil, India, and South Africa.

Background of the Crisis:

Argentina is facing worst economic crisis from the depression 1998 to 2002. It was reported that when unemployment reached 20 percent and while more than half of the population remained below the poverty line.

President Alberto Fernandez of the Everyone’s Front (centre-left Frente De Todos) coalition has announced that he is not going to seek a second term.

Last year in the month of June, Fernandez requested full membership of BRICS in its video conference with representatives and the heads of the states.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula de Silva, in its recent address, pledged from Brazilian people to help them remove the knife of IMF from Argentina’s neck.

Whether Argentina that is a South American nation will join the BRICS remained an open question form a time ago. There is no guarantee that membership will be fruitful. However, it seems that Argentina will possibly all the help it can get from BRICS.

According to Vicky Morillo, who serves as the director of the Institute of Latin American Studies at Columbia University in New York said that “When you are in opposition, you are free to say whatever you want”.

But if either coalition wins, the next government will have to pay more attention towards Brazil and China.

Emerging BRICS:

According to an analysis, BRICS is an acronym used to describe some of the largest markets in the world.

It represents more than 40 percent of the world’s population. It was conceived as a counterweight to G-7 that have long dominated Global Economy and its financial intuitions.

The bloc established in New Development Bank (NDB) during its sixth annual summit in Brazil, Fortaleza in 2014.

Although, NDB has only $12 billion that it can distribute to member counties.

But BRICS countries have combinedly trillion of Dollars in reserves with a lot liquidity available to help Argentina refinance its debts.

Why there is a need to get BRICS Membership:

Argentina has pursued a closer relationship with BRICS. The country has taken loans from IMF multiple times. In 2018, the IMF provided a record $57 Billion to the right wing administration of the then President Mauricio Marci.

But rather than building infrastructure, that money was used to finance capital flight, a violation of the IMF’s by laws.

There are several reasons:

  • The economy of the country is stalled.
  • Inflation soared to more than 50 percent in 2019.
  • Alberto Fernandez cancelled last tranche of the loan.
  • His administration failed to staunch the bleeding.
  • The Covid Pandemic
  • The costly war in Ukraine
  • Historic Drought

All of these factors enabled the country to take the BRICS as a greater option for its salvation from IMF and Debt.

How BRICS can Help?

BRICS has the capacity to redefine Argentina’s relationship with debt. The Julio Gambina, an economist and professor at National University Rosairo in Argentina has said.

If Argentina were to gain entrance to BRICS only to drop out because an entering government has a different political orientation, that would be very costly,” Tokatlian told Al Jazeera

 “At the same time, the BRICS countries want to be certain that new entrants to the bloc will remain. So they’re making their own strategic calculations.”

(Courtesy: Al-Jazeera)

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