Acessibilidade / Reportar erro

The boom and crisis of the Convertibility Plan in Argentina* * This article is part of a study carried out with the support of the 'Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas' (CONICET) with the award of a PhD grant. The author is grateful to Alberto Bonnet and Adrian Piva for their comments.

This article analyses the relationship between state policies and economy in Argentina 1991-2001. In 1991 the currency board regime named 'convertibility' was implemented, within the framework of important neoliberal reforms introduced by the State. These neoliberal reforms facilitated capitalist restructuring, characterized by a leap in productivity, investment and profits. Likewise, these reforms generated imbalances which, along with the changes in the world market conditions from 1998, led to the deepest crisis in Argentina's history. The inefficiency of state neoliberal policies in managing the crisis, based on fiscal adjustment to guarantee the continuity of external financing, led to an economic depression and a financial crash, sparking a mass rebellion and the end of convertibility.

Argentina; 1991-2001; convertibility; state policies; capital accumulation; economic crisis


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