(Bloomberg) -- President Javier Milei achieved something in the past year that many considered impossible: He made Argentines fall out of love with the dollar — for now, at least. For decades ...
Hyperinflation peaked at 290 per cent, the economy has been in deep recession and almost half of Argentines have officially been in poverty. Milei’s shock therapy has imposed sharp government ...
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But Argentines are paying closer attention to month-to-month inflation, taking the sharp decline as a sign that Milei’s fiscal shock therapy is paying off. “Last year, it was brutal ...
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Luis Robles, 66, a restaurant owner, is in support of the president Credit: Simeon Tegel Like many Argentines, Luis Robles, owner of Il Sorpasso, an Italian restaurant in the central San Telmo ...
This is what marks Milei out." Part of the explanation is what came before. Argentines voted Milei into power last year in a shock election driven by anger at the traditional political parties ...
Or will the backlash be strong enough to bring Milei’s revolution to a halt? So far, Argentines have given their unconventional president the running room he needs to liberate the nation’s ...
Javier Milei celebrates his first year in office this week. He has reasons to celebrate: more Argentines are happier with him than he and most of us could have imagined a year ago, given his lack of ...
Perhaps most importantly, Milei is reversing decades of free spending populism, and changing many Argentines’ long-held beliefs that the country can grow and reduce poverty without attracting ...