Don't cry for Milei, Argentina: peso plunges after populist tops primary polls

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Populist Javier Milei won the Presidential primary poll in Argentina, triggering turmoil in financial markets

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00:00 Argentina suffered a political earthquake and the response of the markets has been clear.
00:07 Prices have jumped 30 percent in the two days following the victory of the anti-establishment
00:11 populist Javier Mille in last Sunday's primaries. And the peso plunged by 18 percent.
00:19 The question is whether he or anyone can really correct the economy in Argentina is it's going
00:26 to be tough. There are a few bright spots which I'll talk about. But these are structural
00:30 issues. For example public spending represents 40 percent of the country's GDP. That means
00:36 that if we're going to address the debt problem the issue of inflation and the tendency of
00:42 the central bank to print currency it's going to have to cut dramatically subsidies.
00:49 In a country struggling with annual inflation of over 100 percent growing poverty and a
00:53 rapidly depreciating currency the vote has been a response to anger against the political
00:58 class. But does it really represent an ideological shift in Argentina.
01:04 I don't think so much. Millet's surprise victory in the primaries really represents a wholesale
01:12 shift within the Argentine electorate towards the right and towards this sort of view of
01:17 libertarian almost calls himself an anarcho libertarian of sort of a much reduced state
01:26 reflects core popular values of Argentina. I think Argentina remains very much a center
01:31 left country in its orientation.
01:37 The corruption and lack of renewal of the political class has had consequences throughout
01:41 the region. We've seen them in the United States Brazil and much of Latin America.
01:47 Faced with their sense of insecurity people are looking for extreme alternatives.
01:52 There is a sense that there's been no political renovation that politicians are unaccountable
01:58 but also the sense of profound economic insecurity that's driving this in the surveys done in
02:03 Latin America by Vanderbilt University. More than 80 percent of respondents believe that
02:08 half or more of their politicians were corrupt. When people don't trust their politicians
02:13 when they don't trust their institutions they look for extreme answers outside the system.
02:17 [SWOOSH]

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