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Mark Weisbrot

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Argentina and the Magic Soybean: The Commodity Export Boom That Wasn't

Posted: 05/08/2012 4:50 pm

One of the great myths about the Argentine economy that is repeated nearly every day is that the rapid growth of the Argentine economy during the past decade has been a "commodity export boom." For example, The New York Times reported last week: "Riding an export boom for commodities like soybeans, Argentina's economy grew at an average rate of 7.7 percent from 2004 to 2010, almost twice the average annual growth of 4.3 percent in Chile, a country often cited as a model for economic policies, over the same period."

Michael Shifter, the president of the Inter-American Dialogue and probably the most-quoted source on Latin America in the U.S. press, wrote in a disparaging article about Argentina this week that "if the sales and price of soybean, Argentina's principal export (mainly to China), remain high, then the country may be able to continue its path of economic growth. "

I haven't seen any economists make the claim that Argentina's remarkable economic growth over the past nine years -- which has brought record levels of employment and a two-thirds reduction in poverty -- has been driven by soybeans or a commodities export boom. Maybe that's because it's not true.

I know what you are thinking: "Who cares?" Well, try to keep reading, because this does have implications beyond the sprawling soybean farms in the Argentine province of Cordoba.

What does it mean to have a "commodities boom," or growth driven by the export of commodities? One possibility would be based on quantity: The production and export of these commodities grows so fast that it makes up a large part of the country's real growth in output. Thus, as a matter of accounting, we could look at real GDP growth for 2002-2010* and ask, how much of this real (inflation-adjusted) growth is due to exports of commodities?

It turns out that only 12 percent of Argentina's real GDP growth during this period was due to any kind of exports at all. And just a fraction of this 12 percent was due to commodity exports, including soybeans. So Argentina's economic growth from 2002-2010 wasn't an export-led growth experience, by any stretch of the imagination -- still less a "commodities boom."

The other possibility is based on prices: The price of soybeans and other commodity exports also rose during part of this period. This can boost the economy in various ways, even if the physical amount of exports doesn't increase as rapidly as the economy. If this were driving Argentina's growth, we would expect the dollar value of these exports to have grown faster than the rest of the economy. But this didn't happen either. The value of agricultural exports (including of course soybeans), as a percent of Argentina's GDP didn't rise during the expansion. It was about 5 percent of GDP when the economy started growing in 2002, and 3.7 percent of GDP in 2010.

In other words, there's no plausible story that anyone can tell from the data to support the idea that Argentina's growth over the past nine years was driven by a "commodities boom." Why does this matter? Well, as economist Paul Krugman noted yesterday, "articles about Argentina are almost always very negative in tone -- they're irresponsible, they're renationalizing some industries, they talk populist, so they must be going very badly." Which, he points out, "doesn't speak well for the state of economics reporting." It sure doesn't.

The myth of the "commodities export boom" is one way that Argentina's detractors dismiss Argentina's economic growth as just dumb luck. But the reality is that the economic expansion has been led by domestic consumption and investment. And it happened because the Argentine government changed its most important macroeconomic choices: on fiscal, monetary, and exchange rate policies. That is what took Argentina out of its 1998-2002 depression and turned it into the fastest-growing economy in the Americas.

Now for the world-wide significance of how Argentina's recovery actually happened: As I and many other economists have written, the policies currently being imposed on the eurozone economies -- especially the weaker ones -- are similar to what Argentina went through during the depression that led to its default and devaluation. These policies were pro-cyclical, meaning that they amplified the impact of the downturn. Together with a fixed, overvalued exchange rate, they made the economy worse. By defaulting on its debt and devaluing its currency, Argentina was freed to change its most important macroeconomic policies.

If the European authorities (the European Commission, the European Central Bank, and the IMF) continue to block the eurozone's economic recovery with senseless austerity measures, individual countries will want to consider more rational alternatives in order to restore full employment. The people of Greece, Spain, Portugal, Ireland, and other countries are told every day that they must swallow this bitter medicine, and that there is no alternative to the prolonged suffering and high unemployment that they are going through. But the Argentine experience -- in reality rather than in mythical portrayals -- indicates that this is not true. There are definitely better alternatives -- and they have nothing to do with soybeans or commodity export booms.

*The last year for which we have complete data on exports.

This article was published by The Guardian Unlimited (UK) on May 4, 2012.

 
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One of the great myths about the Argentine economy that is repeated nearly every day is that the rapid growth of the Argentine economy during the past decade has been a "commodity export boom." For ex...
One of the great myths about the Argentine economy that is repeated nearly every day is that the rapid growth of the Argentine economy during the past decade has been a "commodity export boom." For ex...
 
 
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02:51 PM on 05/28/2012
Mr Mark Weisbrot: did you know about the inflation and the corruption associated with the argentinian government? I don't think so. Argentina is going downhill.
11:09 AM on 05/09/2012
Take notice Greece. Tell the IMF and all your creditors to take a hike. Greece does not need the Euro.
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Jerry Bourbon
06:17 PM on 05/15/2012
But the Arabs who sell Greece oil DO need the Euro, or some other hard currency...
10:45 AM on 05/09/2012
It is clear that the policies that brought Argentina out of the 2001 crisis are certainly of economic heterodoxy. But one should not confuse those policies back then with the policies that are being now implemented and that are taking Argentina into a similar situation: huge energy deficit (not a crisis factor in 2001), fiscal deficit (some provinces are not able to pay salaries or suppliers), limitation to buy foreign currency, soaring inflation, etc. State owned banks already finance the state's deficit but the whole system is runing out of stocks of money (pension funds, central bank reserves, etc) and with literally no acces to international markets to place debt, Argentina is heading again into a crisis (certainly any sort of crisis the IMF or any other foreign evil imposed), that will have unforseen consequencies. Anyone not seeing this, will only need to sit down and see the developments in the next 12 to 18 months
10:11 AM on 05/09/2012
I think you're wrong. The commodities helped build up reserves, including the raid of retirement funds and the devaluation of the peso after 10 years of pegging the peso to the dollar. They've now spent all their reserves on subsidies for transportation and energy and a generous wellfare program. They better plan on an exceptional commodity boom because if not Mrs. Fernandez will be out of a job in the next 12 to 18 months. Unlike the Belle Epoque in Argentina more than a hundred years ago, they have nothing to show for it this time.
08:02 AM on 05/09/2012
Once and again, is great to see smart people realizing that the Argentine way to go out of the crisis is the way, and that the austerity measurement are only pain for common people.

Thanks from Argentina
02:16 PM on 05/09/2012
I think you're wrong. The commodities helped build up reserves, as did the raiding of retirement funds and the devaluation of the peso after ten years of pegging the peso to the dollar. They've now spent most if not all their reserves on subsidies for transportation and energy as well as having generous welfare programs. They better plan on an exceptional commodity boom because if not Mrs. Fernandez will be out of a job in the next 12 to 18 months.
11:04 PM on 05/09/2012
so, you think that US$ 47.000 billons is to have no reserves??? that is what the argentinian central bank has, and is only US$ 6.000 billons below than two years ago when we started to buy oil and gas
11:57 AM on 05/10/2012
Do I think they have the the $47 Billion in the bank, probably. But the problem is, you see only half of the equation here. Mrs. Fernandez has entered into policy commitments and their are contingencies that have already committed most of these reserves. So the reserves are actually a lot less than they want you to believe. Who knows what those numbers are because they won't disclose them. The problem here is that Argentina is now in a reverse trend. Where is innovation, efficiency, attraction of foreign investment in the economy, these are all trends that are going down and what this means is that she will commit more and more of those reserves to maintain the status quo. This won't last.
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Richard Pearce
Atheistic-agnostic Canadian polymath
08:46 PM on 05/08/2012
Ah, but the mantra is that the way an economy gets in trouble is government services (rather than not making those who have gotten rich pay their fair share of the burdens of establishing and maintaining the conditions that allowed them to get rich) so, if the facts don't fit the narrative, ignoring, denying, or distorting the facts is how to retain readership (which is the core item that news outlets sell)
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Baghooli
Immortals!
08:43 PM on 05/08/2012
"Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner at a press conference on April 16 announced the seizure of a 51% control in oil company YPF and reasserted Argentina's control over its oil deposits.

This needs a critical understanding of the fact that neither the fairy-tale price theory espoused by many mainstream economists nor blindsided, self-destructive, cannibalistic, crisis-ridden, and ultimately stupid neoliberal policies will work.

Yet, as we can see, the debate over Argentina's oil nationalization is already laden with malign ideology rather than objective economic thinking."

By Cyrus Bina, Professor of Economics at the University of Minnesota
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/NE08Dj05.html
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free reign
My country tis of thee!
10:59 AM on 05/09/2012
Taxpaying citizens, get sacrificed for, subsidize, and lose land to non-citizen oil interests. The very interests pumped to the gills by untaxed intl bankers that just recieved, after rights to drive inflation with our deposaits(Greenspan), $30 trillion in UNTAXED fee generating, inflation /profiteering power. It creates HUGE screaming streams of equity OUT of our economy.
THIS is where the far right and the left see eye-to-eye. We are losing jobs and property to such inflation/outsourcing debt machines. If fair wages were payed offshore, and fair prices by actual (income controlled)supply and demand, are realized we would see balance. Now, treasonously pirated equity, and dangerously unregulated and empowered mkts drive citizens to the need to take control of such untaxed, despootic gangsters. Objective economic thinking does not unleash lechers to extract working equity any which way. What? Should we let MORE of our resources, including our unpoisoned water get exported, tax/tariff free to China? At some point we need to exercise our sovereign rights to OUR own property and not let treasons pirate, as they embed in our real industry.
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Baghooli
Immortals!
02:47 PM on 05/09/2012
Well said!
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Moose Luck 99
GEOENGINEERINGWATCH DOT ORG
06:20 PM on 05/08/2012
15 years of GM Soybeans in Argentina | MO*
www.mo.be/en/article/15-years-gm-soybeans-argentina
Jun 7, 2011 – Intoxication, massive clearing, loss of biodiversity, forced evictions, land concentration and murder. The dark sides of 15 years of soy