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Thread: Javier Milei

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    Default Javier Milei

    I have been watching this new President of Argentina for a year or so, up to his Presidential win and now to his first actions.

    Argentina has enormous natural resources, and was once a great state before the socialists destroyed it. It will be interesting to see if the legislature gets on board with his reforms. Groceries are down 15% overnight.

    In the last 18 days, he is/has:

    -Eliminated 12 out of 21 cabinet posts
    -Firing 5,000 government employees
    -Ending 380k government regulations
    -Banned woke language in the military
    -Bill to affirm the right to self-defense
    -Bill to legalize homeschooling of kids
    -Proposal to punish all riot organizers
    -Future welfare cuts for road-blocking
    -Legalized paying contracts in bitcoin
    -Privatization of state-run companies
    -Opened up the Argentina oil industry

    AFUERA!!!
    "A truth does not mind being questioned. A lie does not like being challenged."

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    Senior Member welch's Avatar
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    Default Re: Javier Milei

    Quote Originally Posted by dneal View Post
    I have been watching this new President of Argentina for a year or so, up to his Presidential win and now to his first actions.

    Argentina has enormous natural resources, and was once a great state before the socialists destroyed it. It will be interesting to see if the legislature gets on board with his reforms. Groceries are down 15% overnight.

    In the last 18 days, he is/has:

    -Eliminated 12 out of 21 cabinet posts
    -Firing 5,000 government employees
    -Ending 380k government regulations
    -Banned woke language in the military
    -Bill to affirm the right to self-defense
    -Bill to legalize homeschooling of kids
    -Proposal to punish all riot organizers
    -Future welfare cuts for road-blocking
    -Legalized paying contracts in bitcoin
    -Privatization of state-run companies
    -Opened up the Argentina oil industry

    AFUERA!!!
    I doubt that Argentina was ever a great state. Argentines claimed that their country centered world strategy, and that it was, somehow, just that their military conquered the Falklands. Henry Kissinger was never my hero, but he put it nicely: "Ah, yes. Argentina, that dagger pointed straight at the heart of Antarctica!".

    Argentine socialists -- and I doubt that there were so many -- could not have ruined what the Argentine military ruined so thoroughly in the 1970s. Judging from Jacobo Timmerman's memoirs of prison, the Junta was a self-insulated crazy bunch killing and torturing because they believed that Jews all worked for Israel, and that Israel was a front for the Soviet Union.

    Meliei's program? Sounds off-base, but we will see.

    My own hunch has always been that Latin America is hopeless. The English colonies in North America benefitted from the social structure of England, especially in the 17th Century. Just then, a "bourgeoisie" defeated the absolutists Stuart kings, shifted power to Parliament, and limited the strength of the aristocracy. Our colonists had no aristocrats, and each colony inherited an English political model...life, liberty, and property, to borrow from John Locke. Outside of Virginia and South Carolina, we began as medium farmers, with property so widely spread that "fully" 75% of white men in Massachusetts could vote.

    The Spanish and Portuguese colonies inherited an aristocratic social and political: a few lords and many peasants. That system cannot grow and thrive.

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    Default Re: Javier Milei

    I doubt that Argentina was ever a great state.
    Respectfully, it's hard to continue reading past this level of ignorance.

    At the turn of the 20th Century, Argentina was the 7th wealthiest nation in the developed world. European immigration to Argentina was second only to the U.S.

    Have you seen the architecture in Buenos Aires?
    "A truth does not mind being questioned. A lie does not like being challenged."

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    Default Re: Javier Milei

    Quote Originally Posted by dneal View Post
    I doubt that Argentina was ever a great state.
    Respectfully, it's hard to continue reading past this level of ignorance.

    At the turn of the 20th Century, Argentina was the 7th wealthiest nation in the developed world. European immigration to Argentina was second only to the U.S.

    Have you seen the architecture in Buenos Aires?

    Nope, I have never seen the architecture of Buenos Aires, nor have I read Argentine novels. I audited a course on modern film, where the professor explained the ups and downs -- mostly downs -- of Argentine film. We watched an Argentine film called La Cienaga, convincing me that I don't need to hunt for more Argentine films. See https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0240419/

    What evidence suggests that Argentina was ever a great state? "For all its success, by the 1920s Argentina was not an industrialized country by the standards of Britain, Germany or the United States.[85] A major hindrance to full industrialization was the lack of energy sources such as coal or hydropower.[85] Experiments with oil, discovered in 1907, had poor results.[85]" That's from a Wikipedia article on an economic history of Argentina: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Econom...y_of_Argentina

    Argentine political history seems to have grown out of feudalism, of lords and peasants. It turned to fascism through the 1920s. Wasn't the 1970s junta a paranoid version of fascism?

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    Default Re: Javier Milei

    Isn't the most important component of the OP's originating post in this thread his information about the way a new President has able to get the Country headed back on the right track after the leftists / socialists just about tanked it?
    If so, one can only hope that the same can / will occur here following the November 2024 election.

    We have no choice, the change has got to come ASAP. Right now we are headed "to hell in a hand bucket" at warp speed!

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    Default Re: Javier Milei

    Quote Originally Posted by welch View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by dneal View Post
    I doubt that Argentina was ever a great state.
    Respectfully, it's hard to continue reading past this level of ignorance.

    At the turn of the 20th Century, Argentina was the 7th wealthiest nation in the developed world. European immigration to Argentina was second only to the U.S.

    Have you seen the architecture in Buenos Aires?

    Nope, I have never seen the architecture of Buenos Aires, nor have I read Argentine novels. I audited a course on modern film, where the professor explained the ups and downs -- mostly downs -- of Argentine film. We watched an Argentine film called La Cienaga, convincing me that I don't need to hunt for more Argentine films. See https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0240419/

    What evidence suggests that Argentina was ever a great state? "For all its success, by the 1920s Argentina was not an industrialized country by the standards of Britain, Germany or the United States.[85] A major hindrance to full industrialization was the lack of energy sources such as coal or hydropower.[85] Experiments with oil, discovered in 1907, had poor results.[85]" That's from a Wikipedia article on an economic history of Argentina: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Econom...y_of_Argentina

    Argentine political history seems to have grown out of feudalism, of lords and peasants. It turned to fascism through the 1920s. Wasn't the 1970s junta a paranoid version of fascism?
    Socialists, fascists, liberals, Democrats. Different names for political locusts who leave societies in ruins.

    You’ve clearly a lot more reading to do, but you’re beginning to grasp the concept.
    "A truth does not mind being questioned. A lie does not like being challenged."

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    Default Re: Javier Milei

    Quote Originally Posted by 724Seney View Post
    Isn't the most important component of the OP's originating post in this thread his information about the way a new President has able to get the Country headed back on the right track after the leftists / socialists just about tanked it?
    If so, one can only hope that the same can / will occur here following the November 2024 election.

    We have no choice, the change has got to come ASAP. Right now we are headed "to hell in a hand bucket" at warp speed!
    To be clear, Argentina did collapse at the turn of the millennia. One of the best "prepper" guides was from an Argentinian describing the society where your money becomes worthless and all government services stop. The metaphor of the zombie apocalypse.

    In 100 years, it went from the 7th wealthiest country in the world to bankruptcy. Milei is a professor of economics. He's an Austrian. We'll see how theory works out in practice, which is the interesting aspect of his ascendency. Unlike Bukele in El Salvador, Argentina has enormous natural resources. Lithium for electric car batteries, huge oil reserves, a large region for agriculture, etc...

    As for the other silliness introduced, totalitarians come in all flavors - but they and their party always seem to prosper at the expense of the public.
    "A truth does not mind being questioned. A lie does not like being challenged."

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    Default Re: Javier Milei

    Leftist institutions are clearly and obstinately opposed to the danger to their self(ish) interests, but the danger of giving one person that kind of power is not inconsequential. If passed, it would be interesting to see if Milei is a Caesar or Sulla. I suspect the latter.

    Reason: Milei Brings His Chainsaw to Argentina's Regulatory State

    Milei Brings His Chainsaw to Argentina's Regulatory State
    If passed, the new libertarian president's omnibus bill of reforms could help Argentina reverse decades of government failure.

    Katarina Hall12.29.2023 7:15 AM

    A little more than two weeks after assuming office, Argentinian President Javier Milei on Wednesday presented his most extensive reform bill to Congress aimed at deregulating South America's second-largest economy.

    The 351-page bill includes 664 articles aimed at deregulating and modifying laws pertaining to several sectors, including labor, commercial, real estate, aeronautics, and health. According to Milei, the omnibus bill contains two-thirds of all of his reform proposals.

    "Argentina is immersed in a serious and deep economic, financial, fiscal, social, pension, security, defense, tariff, energy, health and social crisis without precedent, which affects all levels of society and the very functioning of the State," the bill states.

    These crises were caused by "an innumerable number of restrictions on the exercise of constitutional rights, especially those of trading, working, and exercising lawful industry," the bill continues, adding that these restrictions "severely limit competition" and "artificially distort prices" while "burdening the real income of citizens."

    The first measure in the bill calls for the declaration of "a public emergency in economic, financial, fiscal, pensions, defense, tariff, energy, health, administrative, and social matters until December 31, 2025." If approved, this would mean that Milei would have both the executive and legislative powers and would be able to decide on issues that are currently only regulated by Congress. The measure can be extended for up to two years.

    An entire chapter of the bill is dedicated to privatizing several state-owned companies in order to generate "greater competition and economic efficiency, reduce the tax burden, improve the quality of services, promote private investment and professionalize management." The bill mentions 41 companies it proposes to privatize, including the flagship airline Aerolíneas Argentinas, the oil company YFP, the country's largest bank, Banco de la Nación, the news agency Télam, the water company AYSA, the Argentine mint, and the country's rail system.

    Milei's proposal aims to simplify, digitalize, and de-bureaucratize the administration "to promote transparency and due administrative process…to obtain efficient regulations for market competitiveness, job creation, and everything that contributes to raising the standard of living of citizens."

    The bill proposes to eliminate the primary elections and switch to a single-ballot system. It also seeks to move the chamber of deputies from a system that determines the number of representatives proportionally with the population to one of single-member constituencies.

    The bill also extends the government's new anti-protest measures, increasing penalties to up to four years in prison for those who use arms to disrupt public transportation and up to five years for those who "direct, organize, or coordinate a meeting or demonstration that impedes, hinders or obstructs circulation."

    Another chapter specifically addresses oil and seeks to ensure affordable oil supplies by leaving prices up to the market. Currently, the government can meddle in crude and gasoline prices, according to Bloomberg. The new bill will not allow the executive branch "to intervene, or fix, prices in the domestic market."

    Other measures in the bill include the resale of sports tickets with "no limit to the number of times such operation may be carried out;" the authorization of self-driving cars for individuals, passengers, or cargo; abolishing price ceilings on rent; easing price caps for private health services; and "express divorces."

    The measures will be reviewed by Congress during the extraordinary sessions that began this week and will last until January 31. But Milei's opposition, which holds the majority of seats in Congress, has vowed to not let the decree pass. Meanwhile, protests have sprung up in response to the omnibus bill. Several social organizations took to the streets in Buenos Aires, and Argentina's main labor union called for a general strike on January 24 in protest against the reforms.

    Should Milei's sweeping reforms pass, Argentina would move from being one of the world's most regulated economies to a deregulated, free market economy that could reverse decades of government failure.
    "A truth does not mind being questioned. A lie does not like being challenged."

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    Default Re: Javier Milei

    We need at least six months, and probably a year, to judge how Meliei's policies have worked, or even to know if it will take even longer to begin to see changes.
    Last edited by welch; January 2nd, 2024 at 01:07 PM.

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    Default Re: Javier Milei

    I agree, and short term successes or failures shouldn't skew one's perspective - although the latter could put a quick end to the experiment. As noted already, the legislature could also be his stumbling block.
    "A truth does not mind being questioned. A lie does not like being challenged."

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    Default Re: Javier Milei

    Milei's impressive speech at Davos today.



    -edit-

    Here’s the short attention span version.

    IMG_0819.jpeg
    Last edited by dneal; January 17th, 2024 at 08:35 PM.
    "A truth does not mind being questioned. A lie does not like being challenged."

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    Default Re: Javier Milei

    Barrons: Argentina Sees First Monthly Budget Surplus In 12 Years

    The Argentine government in January saw its first monthly budget surplus in nearly 12 years, as new President Javier Milei continues to push for strong spending cuts, the Economy Ministry announced.

    January was the first full month in office for Milei, a far-right libertarian who took office in December, and it ended with a positive balance for public-sector finances of $589 million at the official exchange rate, the government said late Friday.

    The figure includes payment of interest on the public debt.

    It is "the first (monthly) financial surplus since August 2012, and the first surplus for a January since 2011," the Economy Ministry said, according to the official Telam news agency.

    Milei has been negotiating with the International Monetary Fund over its $44 billion loan and has vowed to achieve balance in public finances this year.

    "The zero deficit is not negotiable," Economy Minister Luis Caputo said Friday on X, the former Twitter.

    Milei, an economist, has advocated sharp cuts in spending and a reduction of public debt on the way to a dollarization of the economy.

    Following a 50 percent devaluation of the peso, a lifting of price controls and strong rate increases, Argentina saw an inflation rate for January of 20.6 percent, with a 12-month rate of 254.2 percent.

    The year 2023, the final year of the center-left government of Alberto Fernandez, ended with a 211 percent inflation rate.
    "A truth does not mind being questioned. A lie does not like being challenged."

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    Default Re: Javier Milei

    The Telegraph 4 May 2024: Milei is already proving the Left-wing economic establishment wrong

    Argentina has historically been a country of failed governments, economic collapses, and debt defaults. Yet incredibly there are signs that – against all the odds – the bold, free market reforms of its libertarian President Javier Milei are beginning to work.

    With inflation falling, interest rates coming down, and the peso on fire in one market, Milei is already proving the global Left-wing economic establishment – addicted to bigger government and endless deficits – wrong. Indeed, it may provide a template for other countries to escape from zero growth.

    First, what’s changed in the country: inflation has fallen to 11pc and Milei predicts it will fall further. While a monthly figure (this is Argentina after all), price rises may be coming back under control after soaring above 300pc annually.

    Last week, Milei announced that the country had recorded its first quarterly budget surplus since 2008, a modest 0.2pc of GDP, but still an astonishing achievement in such a short space of time, especially for a country that has run deficits for 113 of the last 123 years.

    Then, earlier this week, the central bank, which Milei has not yet gotten around to abolishing as he pledged, cut interest rates for the third time in three weeks. While they are still at an eye-watering 50pc, that will start to feed through into the economy very soon. Investors have started to notice.

    According to Bloomberg data, in the blue-chip swap market the peso was the best-performing currency in the world in the first quarter of this year, and the bond markets are rallying as well.

    It may also get better over the months ahead. With stabilising prices, and a rising currency, investment should start flowing again into a country rich in natural resources and hyper-competitive on wages costs.

    If Milei can make good on his promise to unlock the country’s vast reserves of shale oil and gas – using technologies that have proved safe and successful in the US – then the economy could even start to boom.

    If so, Argentina would be defying a global economic establishment addicted to bigger government, more regulation, and rising deficits.

    We keep being lectured, not least by the shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves, and by President Biden and his acolytes in the United States, on the need for an active state, an industrial strategy, and more borrowing to pay for investment, and that regulation is the key to industrial and economic leadership, not its enemy.

    The IMF, meanwhile, was too often a huge cheerleader for the failed Argentinian administrations of the past, extending the biggest loans in its history to the country.

    On Milei’s election, he was dismissed as a madman who would be removed from office within a matter of months, if not weeks. In proving that narrative wrong, he would show that even after the short-lived catastrophe of the Liz Truss government, free market reforms are far from impossible.

    So how is he en route to deliver such a massive shock to the stale economic orthodoxy? Fundamentally, he got three big calls right.

    First, even without a majority in parliament, he has been ruthless. Whole government departments have been closed down overnight, regardless of the immediate consequences. The Ministry of Culture was axed, so was the anti-discrimination agency, and the state-owned news service. Only last month, he unveiled plans to fire another 70,000 state employees.

    Milei hasn’t attempted to cut gradually, to control budgets, or to ease people out with early retirement, or hiring freezes. Instead, he has, as promised, taken a ‘chainsaw’ to the machinery of the state, yielding huge savings in the process.

    Next, he has been bold. The president massively devalued the peso on day one, taking the financial hit upfront, and then tore up rent controls, price restrictions and state subsidies. He pared back workers’ rights, reducing maternity leave and severance compensation, and allowed companies to fire workers who went on strike.

    He ripped away fuel subsidies, even though it meant a temporary spike in inflation. Sure, there has been some short-term pain, but the results are now becoming evident.

    Rents, for example, are falling by 20pc a year as landlords, freed from controls, put more supply on the market, instead of withdrawing it as they do in countries where the price is set by the government.

    Finally, Milei has never stopped making the argument. He promotes freedom, liberalisation and a smaller state with a messianic zeal.

    Many of the measures he has taken might be rough, but the president has never attempted to dismiss that, instead explaining patiently and persistently why the reforms are justified, and how they will create greater prosperity for everyone in the long run.

    Much of the developed world, and the UK in particular, are gradually slipping into Argentinian-style stagnation before Milei came along.

    Governments are hooked on subsidies and price controls, trying to buy their way out of every challenge with higher spending. Deficits are allowed to rise relentlessly, with no meaningful plan for ever bringing them down again. A corrupt, crony capitalism is allowed to flourish, killing competition.

    But the Argentine leader is providing a blueprint for how to break free. The global economic elite keeps lecturing us on why we need more government and a more powerful state despite the painful lack of results. Argentina is challenging it in dramatic fashion.

    It is just possible that it is starting to work.
    "A truth does not mind being questioned. A lie does not like being challenged."

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    Default Re: Javier Milei

    The Telegraph, 8 May 2024: Milei’s Argentina is fast becoming the Texas of Latin America

    Javier Milei has started his libertarian economic experiment to transform Argentina. In a series of dispatches, The Telegraph’s World Economy Editor, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, travels through what used to be one of the world’s richest nations to examine whether “shock therapy” can work.

    President Javier Milei has flawless timing. Argentina’s shale boom has reached industrial take-off just as he embarks on his extreme libertarian experiment: a Hayekian free market assault on the delinquent Peronist state and all its works.

    The long-suffering nation is swinging very fast from a costly dependence on energy imports, and a chronic leakage of hard currency, to the happier condition of net hydrocarbon exports. The prolific shale basin of Vaca Muerta is finally delivering.

    After years of talk and many dropped balls, this arid expanse of northern Patagonia is suddenly starting to look like the next Texas, promising to draw in the serious dollars needed to stabilise the ruined peso and make all else possible.

    “It is not the same Vaca Muerta of 10 years ago, and we’re only doing a fraction of what we could do,” said Horracio Turri from Pampa Energy.

    The US Geological Survey estimates that the region holds the world’s second biggest reserves of shale gas, and fourth biggest reserves of shale oil. Drilling has begun at another shale basin at Palermo Aike in Argentina’s deep south, so the potential could be significantly larger.

    “Oil is what will put Argentina back on its feet because it is going to be a very big source of foreign currency. We have to start thinking like a petro-state because we are a world player in the making. First we have to tackle our infrastructure problems,” said Mr Turri, speaking at the Vaca Muerta Insights 2024 forum.

    Those problems start at the crack of dawn every day in the regional capital of Neuquén as 30,000 people try to reach the shale hub of Añelo 50 miles away. It is a lethal Mad Max parade along a two-way road, full of craters, carrying hundreds of trucks skidding on and off the dirt verge.

    Many are loaded with specialist silica sand, the lifeblood of the fracking industry. There are too few trailers in Añelo to lodge the workers, so if you want to join the shale rush you take your chance.

    Each well at Vaca Muerta needs some 15,000 tonnes of sand, 400 trucks of water, and a constant supply of diesel. Previous governments talked of upgrading the Norpatagónico railway to put an end to this daily ritual but the plans were overtaken by one debt crisis after another. The aqueduct bringing in water for the drilling rigs never got off the ground.

    “Infrastructure is something we just don’t do in Argentina, everything has been crumbling for 70 years,” said Prof Alejandro Welbers from CEMA University.

    But the needs are becoming more urgent and the stakes ever higher. Vaca Muerta is blessed with high-pressure seams of black marl at a depth of 3,000 metres, up to 450 metres thick, matching the richest layers of the Wolfberry shale in the Permian.

    Rig crews from Halliburton, Schlumberger and Weatherford are already a feature of this strange moonscape, dotted with towering pillars of red sand.

    McKinsey estimates that new fracking technology – smart drills, geonavigation, multi-drilling from the same pad – has cut production costs to $36 (£29) a barrel, an irresistible business in a world market with a structural price of $80-$90. It is the best low-sulphur light sweet crude. Gas comes in at circa $1.60 (MMBtu), low enough to produce liquefied natural gas (LNG) for export to Europe at competitive cost.

    Shale oil output has quadrupled to 380,000 barrels a day (b/d) over the last three years, suddenly beating expectations, and tracking the Permian growth trajectory that so stunned Saudi Arabia, OPEC, and the old petroleum order.

    The government target of 1m b/d already looks too modest, with wildcatters in Neuquén talking of Norwegian levels above 1.5m b/d as the potential peak.

    “We think we can triple oil and double gas by 2028,” said Miguel Galuccio, founder of Argentina’s Vista Energy, which sank eight new wells here in March alone.

    Horacio Marin, YPF’s Texas-trained chief executive and Milei insurgent, says he will make it his business to ensure that Argentina is generating $30bn a year in hydrocarbon exports by 2030 or shortly after.

    “We’re doing this for the Argentine republic, and for our children. If we can bring in $30bn we’re not going to have any more exchange rate problems,” he said.

    He is pioneering a form of ‘lean fracking’ based on the Toyota manufacturing model.

    “We want the construction of an oil rig to be as efficient as the construction of a car. It gets rid of layers of operational bureaucracy and makes us extremely competitive. Not even the Americans are doing this,” he said.

    Argentina’s gas has until recently been bottled up in Vaca Muerta for lack of pipelines. The country had to import 80 ship loads of LNG gas in 2022, for global supply after Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Everything went wrong at once. The worst drought in half a century shut down hydropower generation.

    The national soybean crop – Argentina’s top earner – fell by 44pc. It was this that drained dollar reserves .

    The Nestor Kirchner gas pipeline came into action last August, too late to save the Peronists, but it is now able to supply Buenos Aires through the approaching Argentine winter. LNG imports are collapsing. The gas balance will switch progressively into a large surplus over the next decade as Vaca Muerta supplies Chile, Brazil, and the Mercosur market by pipeline.

    Mr Marin said YPF has contracted two LNG floating terminals with Malaysia’s Petronas. A larger fixed terminal on the Atlantic coast will follow. If all goes perfectly – an enormous if – Argentina’s combined exports of oil and gas per capita may not be that far short of Russia by the mid-2030s.

    “Without Vaca Muerta it would be painful to think about Argentina,” says Rolo Figueroa, the governor of Neuquén province, which operates almost as an independent petro-state.

    The governor no longer presides at the original Chateau Gris, a two-storey wooden chalet built in Scottish style by the firm John Wright in 1904 with materials shipped from Britain, part of the largely forgotten British and Irish influence in northern Patagonia. It was a lieutenant Ignacio Hamilton Fotheringham who first set foot in Neuquén in the War of the Desert in the 1870s.

    President Milei has cut off all federal transfers to the regions in quest of his fiscal surplus. He has cut public investment by 84pc. This drastic austerity has left Neuquén with 413 paralysed projects.

    Governor Figueroa is taking matters into his own hands, borrowing from the Inter American Development Bank and issuing $500m of bonds on the open market, offering Vaca Muerta as political collateral.

    “We know that we have to monetise it and we have only got a window of time. We have got to get everything right to attract investors,” he said.

    Getting everything right has not been Argentina’s forte over decades of misgovernment. The Peronists poisoned the energy well by nationalising the Argentine oil company YPF in 2012, setting off a chain of lawsuits. The fiscal and labour regime has been toxic for foreign capital.

    Javier Milei aims to sweep away the thicket of Peronist controls, opening the country’s hydrocarbon industry to global market forces. His RIGI investment law will in principle give foreign oil and gas companies total freedom to repatriate earnings at the market exchange rate, and bring in their own kit without restrictions. It will remove import and export taxes.

    It pledges no interference from the Argentine state for 30 years.

    “Our guiding principle is that everything should be governed by price signals under the laws of free enterprise,” said the national energy minister, Eduardo Rodríguez Chirillo, a Thatcherite expert on privatisation.

    The bet is that global capital will do the heavy lifting on infrastructure once the red carpet is rolled out. It is a risky proposition in a changed world order where industrial policy is de rigueur, and the new gospel is how to leverage private investment with public seed money.

    But not every country has a Vaca Muerta to offer. McKinsey says the basin will need $45bn of investment over the next 10 years to reach scale, beyond the means of the Argentine state in any plausible scenario.

    Foreign investors are keeping a watchful eye on the Peronist backlash, so far gaining little traction in a country hungry for a fresh start – like washed-out Britain in the 1970s after hitting bottom during the three-day week.

    Mr Milei’s omnibus law has successfully run the gauntlet through the lower house of parliament after much horse-trading, but doing better in his showdown with the discredited parties of the ‘casta’ than many expected. The senate will be harder (he has only seven seats) but he carries the big stick of decree power if all else fails, like Emmanuel Macron in today’s France.

    Oil state governors of all parties want the package. In a sense, Vaca Muerta has become a national project that transcends other divisions. Argentina’s climate pledges scarcely enter the debate. The economic imperative is too great to worry too much about CO2 emissions. Besides, shale enthusiasts argue that global fossil use is above all a demand phenomenon.

    Precisely where the supply comes from is a secondary question.

    Ex-president Cristina Fernandez Kirchner can only gnash her teeth and rail at the injustice of fortune, as shale technology and the global commodity cycle deliver nicely for her mortal political foe.

    “Milei’s plan is not anarcho-capitalism, it is anarcho-colonial. The recovery strategy is now clear: it’s oil, gas, mines, and grains. He wants to turn Argentina into an extraction country for raw materials. This pre-capitalism takes us back to the days of the Viceroyalty,” she said.

    Alternatively, it harks back to the halcyon days before the First World War when Argentina enjoyed a prosperous place as Australia’s twin in the British imperial and commercial system, shipping commodities to Europe. It was the best of times for Anglo-Argentine concord, culminating in Harrods of Buenos Aires, the only foreign branch ever opened abroad.

    A century later, Australia still manages to leverage its resource and farming wealth into a high-tech economy of top tier affluence. There is no foreordained reason why Argentina cannot do much the same.
    "A truth does not mind being questioned. A lie does not like being challenged."

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