Buenos Aires 鈥 With a modest year-end performance in the polls, Argentine President Mauricio Macri heads into the new year riding the bounce from a relatively successful G-20 summit in Buenos Aires, and quietly confident he can win re-election in 2019.
Before the summit, the president鈥檚 anxious supporters feared a grim holiday season. Following this year鈥檚 currency crisis, the economy is shrinking, poverty is rising and observers were bracing for year-end violence that could have forced Mr. Macri to reconsider his reelection campaign. Instead, despite social tensions, the country is calm and the president鈥檚 popularity is rising, albeit from a deep hole.
鈥淭he president looks stronger coming out of the summit, and I see a man who has made his mind up鈥 to run for reelection, a senior official said in an interview, noting a seven-point increase in Mr. Macri鈥檚 approval ratings, to 39 percent, in the latest Poliarqu铆a poll. 鈥淚t seems he鈥檚 determined to run again, and to run to win.鈥 (The official spoke on background per government protocol.)
What changed? For one, Mr. Macri avoided any number of pitfalls during the G-20 gathering that brought world leaders to Buenos Aires. Unions threatening a general strike settled for a one-time Christmas bonus instead, and the capital became unusually tranquil thanks to high security and the declaration of a national holiday.
As a result, Mr. Macri far exceeded expectations. (鈥淓verybody expected it to be a fiasco,鈥 Christine Lagarde, the International Monetary Fund鈥檚 managing director, famously admitted after the summit.) For a moment, Argentina, which spent the year as a punchline and international charity case, basked in the glow of global admiration, as everyone from President Trump to Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin visited and expressed support for Mr. Macri鈥檚 ambitious reform agenda.
鈥淭he tone of his meetings with world leaders was extraordinarily supportive,鈥 a senior foreign ministry official said in an interview. (He also requested anonymity.) 鈥淭he message for the president was: We want you to succeed.鈥
That said, the challenges for Mr. Macri heading into this critical election year are daunting. The year-end inflation rate is expected to be 47 percent 鈥 a far cry from the government鈥檚 15 percent forecast at the beginning of the year. Interest rates stand at an astronomical 60 percent. Meanwhile, poverty, Mr. Macri鈥檚 number-one priority, is rising again, and now exceeds a third of the population, according to the Universidad Cat贸lica Argentina鈥檚 closely watched index.
In these conditions, consumer confidence has fallen precipitously. But there is some optimism that the storm has passed, to use Mr. Macri鈥檚 preferred metaphor. 鈥淲e鈥檙e touching the bottom, yes, but I see positive signs of recovery in the middle of next year,鈥 Paolo Rocca, CEO of the engineering giant Techint, said recently while announcing a billion-dollar investment in Vaca Muerte, Argentina鈥檚 giant Patagonian shale play.
The government hopes that investments in Vaca Muerta 鈥 coupled with rising farm yields and a boost in tourism and exports resulting from the peso devaluation 鈥 will bring about an economic recovery in time for the October election. That would help Mr. Macri meet his goal of halving the inflation rate next year, and hit IMF budget targets without further painful cuts in public spending.
Even a modest recovery could permit Mr. Macri鈥檚 reelection, despite his low approval rating. That is thanks to the fractured opposition, which will likely deprive any candidate of a first-round victory. In an expected second round against Mr. Macri鈥檚 predecessor, Cristina Fern谩ndez de Kirchner, Mr. Macri could shift the conversation from his economic performance to his opponent鈥檚 considerable baggage, including a range of corruption charges. Mr. Macri鈥檚 policial adviser, Jaime Dur谩n Barba, is reportedly eager for a debate about Ms. Fern谩ndez de Kirchner鈥檚 qualifications to return to the Casa Rosada.
Given Argentina鈥檚 economic performance under Mr. Macri, the election will no doubt be a close-run affair. But for now, it appears the president will end the year with a rare commodity for his beleaguered administration: political and economic momentum.
David Smith, a former foreign correspondent and UN diplomat, is a special contributor to the Latin American Program鈥檚 Argentina Project at the Woodrow 浪花直播 International Center for Scholars.
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