BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — President Javier Milei on Friday announced that he would lift most of the country's strict capital and currency controls next week, a high-stakes gamble made possible by a new loan from the International Monetary Fund. It marked a major step forward in the libertarian's program to normalize Argentina's economy after decades of unbridled spending.
The IMF's executive board late Friday green-lit the $20 billion bailout package, which offers a lifeline to Argentina's dangerously depleting foreign currency reserves over the next four years. The fund praised President Milei's tough austerity program and zero-deficit fiscal policy, saying the program sought to ''consolidate impressive initial gains'' and address "remaining macroeconomic vulnerabilities.''
''Against this backdrop, the authorities are embarking on a new phase of their stabilization plan,'' said IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva, adding that Argentina has committed to doubling down on spending cuts and economic deregulation and transitioning toward a new foreign currency exchange regime.
Shortly afterward, Milei, flanked by his ministers, addressed his nation on television.
''Today we are breaking the cycle of disillusionment and disenchantment and are beginning to move forward for the first time,'' he said. ''We have eliminated the exchange rate controls on the Argentine economy for good.''
A tangle of regulations
The capital controls, known here as ''el cepo,'' or ''the clamp, '' are a tangle of regulations that help to stabilize the peso at an official rate and prevent capital flight from Argentina.
Imposed by a previous administration in 2019, the restrictions clamp down on individuals' and companies' access to dollars, discouraging the foreign investment that Milei needs to achieve his goal of transforming heavily regulated Argentina into a free economy.