
With Javier Mileiโs recent victory in Argentinaโs presidential election, everyone is talking about the prospect of dollarization there.
Enter a curious piece in the Wall Street Journal. I find the Journalโs straight economics reporting of late to be of higher quality than that found in the Financial Times or the Economist, but this piece is an exception.
Hereโs what it says about why dollarization wonโt work in Argentina.
Yet choosing the wrong conversion rate can be fatal. Also, the dollars needed to swap for all peso holdings are likely north of $9 billion, Capital Economics estimated in August, based on the black-market rate for the peso. Borrowing this money when the country canโt pay back the hard currency it already owes seems unfeasible.
โNot enough dollarsโ is a bad reason to claim dollarization wonโt work. Currency units are an arbitrary numeraire. All Argentina needs to do is set a conversion rate of pesos to dollars that would fail to exhaust the supply of dollars on hand.
Now, perhaps the real problem, then, is not that Argentina doesnโt have enough dollars, but that given the number of dollars it does have, it would need to depreciate the peso โtoo muchโ to make the conversion work.
But the piece tries to make the opposite point, that the peso is too strong and needs to be depreciated:
The off-the-charts fertility of the Pampas region brings in dollars, but that pushes theย peso too high for the less-efficient manufacturing sector. A dependency on exports ofย soybeans, corn and wheat then makes the economy vulnerable to volatile global pricesย and droughts. These torpedoed the balance of payments back in 2018 and again thisย year.
You canโt have it both ways.
The piece then goes on to editorialize that Argentina needs โexport-led industrial policyโ for economic revival:
Exploiting the Vaca Muerta shale formation may help, but Argentina ultimately needs to close the productivity gap through the kind of export-led industrial policies that have worked in South Korea and Vietnam. Populist recipes have failed to deliver these, and so will Mileiโs.
First of all, Hong Kong and Singapore had much higher growth rates than South Korea and Vietnam without โindustrial policies.โ
Secondly, whoโs to say that Mileiโs policies wonโt deliver productivity growth? That remains to be seen.
Finally, no one doubts that Argentina has had terrible macroeconomic policies. Itโs an odd argument against fixing those to point to yet more issues the country faces.
Dollarization may not be the first-best solution for Argentina, though itโs hard to imagine it will be worse than hyperinflation, and this odd piece of โreportingโ in the Wall Street Journal badly fumbles the case against it.
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