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The economic recovery in Argentina, which began with a robust start in early 2025 after years of underperformance,is poised ...
Regionally, Argentina is a relatively safe country, which also has a rather strong education system. Those were important factors as well that determined my choice”, he adds. In his research paper, ...
The Federal Reserve's credibility forms the bedrock of global monetary stability. Trump's assault on its independence ...
Once among the wealthiest nations on Earth, Argentina's rise and fall is one of the most dramatic economic stories of the modern era. How did a country blessed with natural resources, fertile land ...
According to Argentina's National Institute of Statistics and Censuses, or INDEC, the poverty rate fell to 38.1% from52.9% the first and second half of 2024. Extreme poverty dropped to 8.2% from 18%.
President Milei of Argentina, after months of steady economic progress, is facing a setback with inflation due to increase this month, up from the relatively low 4.2 percent increase in May over the ...
Javier Milei Javier Milei's Economic Reforms Are Already Paying Off in Argentina But local free market economists think further currency and labor reforms will get the Argentine economy recovering ...
Argentina will weaken its peso by more than 50% to 800 per dollar, cut energy subsidies and cancel public works tenders as part of an economic shock therapy aimed at fixing the South American ...
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks with reporter Daniel Politi about the turnaround for Argentina's once-ailing economy. Some signs indicate the economic progress is happening on the backs of poor people.
Reuters FILE PHOTO: Argentina's Economy Minister Luis Caputo gestures during a business meeting hosted by the American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham), in Buenos Aires, Argentina March 12, 2024.
Milei has lived under the economic oppression of Argentina’s long list of socialist governments. He recognizes that the socialism creeping into Western Hemisphere governance has stifled prosperity.
KAHN: "When the disaster is really big, like the economic one Argentina has been dealing with for decades," he says, "fixing it is costly." And for many Argentines, the fix is hurting.