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- argentina_2002_09_03.htm accessdate "2013-09-23".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm date "2002-09-03".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm first "Alan B.".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm first2 "Mark".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm first3 "Debayani".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm isCitedBy 1998–2002_Argentine_great_depression.
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm last "Cibils".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm last2 "Weisbrot".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm last3 "Kar".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm publisher "Center for Economic and Policy Research".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm quote "But this approach has failed for more than four years, as the economy remains mired in a depression, with a loss of more than 20 percent of GDP since the last business cycle peak in 1998.".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm quote "Furthermore, the crisis was not caused by fiscal profligacy: the worsening of the central government’s fiscal balance from 1993 to 2002 was not a result of increased government spending . Rather, there was a decline in government revenue due to the recession, which began in the third quarter of 1998. More importantly, Argentina got stuck in a debt spiral in which higher interest rates increased the debt and the country’s risk premium, which led to ever higher interest rates and debt service until its default in December of 2001. The interest rate shocks came from outside, starting with the US Federal Reserve’s decision to raise short-term rates in February of 1994, and on through the Mexican, Asian, Russian, and Brazilian financial crises .".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm quote "GDP has declined at a record 16.3 percent annual rate in the first quarter of 2002. Unemployment stands at 21.5 percent of the labor force, and real monthly wages have declined by 18 percent over the course of the year. Official poverty and indigence rates have reached record levels: 53% of Argentines now live below the official poverty line, while 25% are indigent . Since October 2001, 5.2 million Argentines have fallen below the poverty line, while seven out of ten Argentine children are poor today.".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm quote "The second major private outflow, which coincides with the Asian, Russian, and Brazilian crises, sent the economy into a recession from which it has never recovered.".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm quote "While this is the worst economic crisis in Argentine history, there are a number of reasons to view the economy as poised for a rapid recovery, and one that can take place without external financing. Most importantly, Argentina is running a large current account and trade surplus. Primarily a result of the devaluation, the export sector has vastly expanded as a share of the economy , and is considerably more competitive internationally.".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm title "Argentina Since Default: The IMF and the Depression".
- argentina_2002_09_03.htm url argentina_2002_09_03.htm.