IMF agrees £15.6 billion bailout with cash-strapped Argentina

The preliminary agreement comes as president Javier Milei seeks to overturn the country’s old economic order.

By contributor Associated Press Reporter
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Argentina’s President Javier Milei
Argentina’s President Javier Milei (AP)

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said it has reached a preliminary agreement with cash-strapped Argentina on a 20 billion-dollar (£15.6 billion) bailout.

Tuesday’s agreement would provide a welcome reprieve to libertarian president Javier Milei as he seeks to overturn the country’s old economic order.

As a staff-level agreement, the rescue package still requires final approval from the IMF’s executive board, which was expected to meet in the coming days.

The fund’s announcement offers a lifeline to Mr Milei, who has cut inflation and stabilised Argentina’s economy with a free-market austerity agenda that has reversed the reckless borrowing of his left-wing populist predecessors.

The IMF has praised his success in slashing Argentina’s fiscal deficit, but had held off on a new loan to the country that is its biggest debtor, with 22 IMF loans already handed out since 1958.

To achieve Argentina’s first fiscal surplus in almost two decades, Mr Milei has eliminated government agencies, firing thousands of public employees and scrapping subsidies and price controls.

But without cash from the international lender, he has been unable to rebuild Argentina’s rapidly depleting foreign exchange reserves, which he needs to repay debts and lift the country’s long-standing strict currency controls.

Currency controls prevent companies from sending profits abroad, discouraging foreign investment.

“The agreement builds on the authorities’ impressive early progress in stabilising the economy,” the IMF said in a statement announcing the agreement on the loan under a 48-month arrangement.

There was no immediate response from Argentine authorities, who had been negotiating the deal for months.