fbpx
Wikipedia

Domingo Cavallo

Domingo Felipe Cavallo (born July 21, 1946) is an Argentine economist and politician. Between 1991 and 1996, he was the Minister of Economy during Carlos Menem's presidency. He is known for implementing the convertibility plan, which established a pseudo-currency board with the United States dollar and allowed the dollar to be used for legal contracts. This brought the inflation rate down from over 1,300% in 1990 to less than 20% in 1992 and nearly to zero during the rest of the 1990s.[1] He implemented pro-market reforms which included privatizations of state enterprises. Productivity per hour worked during his five-years as minister of Menem increased by more than 100%.[2] In 2001, he was the economy minister for nine months during the 1998–2002 Argentine great depression. During a bank run, he implemented a restriction on cash withdrawing, known as corralito. This was followed by the December 2001 riots in Argentina and the fall of Fernando de la Rúa as president.[3]

Domingo Cavallo
Minister of Economy
In office
20 March 2001 – 20 December 2001
PresidentFernando de la Rúa
Preceded byRicardo López Murphy
Succeeded byJorge Capitanich
In office
1 February 1991 – 6 August 1996
PresidentCarlos Menem
Preceded byAntonio Erman González
Succeeded byRoque Fernández
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
July 8, 1989 – January 31, 1991
PresidentCarlos Menem
Preceded bySusana Ruiz Cerruti
Succeeded byGuido di Tella
President of the Central Bank of Argentina
In office
July 2, 1982 – August 26, 1982
PresidentReynaldo Bignone
Preceded byEgidio Iannella
Succeeded byJulio González del Solar
National Deputy
In office
December 10, 1997 – March 20, 2001
ConstituencyCity of Buenos Aires
In office
December 10, 1987 – December 10, 1989
ConstituencyCordoba
Personal details
Born
Domingo Felipe Cavallo

(1946-07-21) July 21, 1946 (age 77)
San Francisco, Córdoba, Argentina
Political partyJusticialist Party (1983–1996)
Action for the Republic (1996–2005)
Is Possible Party [es] (2013)
SpouseSonia Abrazián
Alma materNational University of Córdoba
Harvard University
WebsiteOfficial website

Cavallo is a Doctor in Economic Sciences from the National University of Córdoba and obtained his PhD in Economics from Harvard University. He received five Honoris Causa doctorates from Genoa, Turin, Bologna, Ben-Gurion and Paris Pantheon-Sorbonne universities. He was professor at the National and Catholic Universities of Córdoba, and at New York, Harvard, and Yale universities.[4]

Early years Edit

Cavallo was born in San Francisco, Córdoba Province to Florencia and Felipe Cavallo, Italian Argentine immigrants from the Piedmont Region. He graduated with honors in Accounting (1967) and Economics (1968) at the National University of Córdoba, where he earned his doctorate in economics in 1970. He married the former Sonia Abrazián in 1968, and had three children. He would later enroll at Harvard University, where he earned a second doctorate in Economics in 1977.[5]

Cavallo taught at the National University of Córdoba (1969–84), the Catholic University of Córdoba (1970–74), and New York University (1996–97). He wrote a number of books and was publisher of Forbes in 1998–99.

Central Bank Edit

In July 1982, after the Falklands War fiasco brought more moderate leadership to the military dictatorship, Cavallo was appointed president of the Central Bank. He inherited the country's most acute financial and economic crisis since 1930, and a particularly heinous Central Bank regulation painfully remembered as the Central Bank Circular 1050.

Implemented in 1980 at the behest of conservative Minister of Economy, José Alfredo Martínez de Hoz, policy tied adjustable loan installments (nearly all lending in Argentina is on an adjustable interest basis) to the value of the US dollar locally. Exchange rates were controlled at the time and therefore raised little concern. The next February, however, the peso was sharply devalued and continued to plummet for the rest of 1981 and into 1982. Mortgage and business borrowers saw their monthly installments increase over tenfold in just a year and many, including homeowners just months away from paying off their loans, unable to keep up, either lost their entire equity or everything outright.[6]

Cavallo immediately rescinded the hated Circular 1050 and as a result, saved millions of homeowners and small-business owners from financial ruin (as well as millions more, indirectly). What followed, however, remained the subject of great controversy.[7]

Though nothing new to the economic history of Argentina, he is often accused of implementing financial policies that may have allowed Argentina's main private enterprises to transfer their debts to the state, transforming their private debt into public obligations. During 1982 and 1983, more than 200 firms (30 economic groups and 106 transnational enterprises) transferred a great part of their 17 billion dollar debt to the federal government, thanks to secured exchange rates on loan installments. This fraud took place both before and after his very brief turn at the Central Bank, but not while he was in charge. In a speech in September 1982 he was forced renounce and express his opposition to the transfer of debt to the state. He inherited this practice from Martínez de Hoz himself (whose chief interest, steelmaker Acindar, had unloaded US$700 million of its debts in this way). Moreover, Cavallo subjected payments covered by these exchange rate guarantees to indexation; this latter stipulation was dropped by his successor, Julio González del Solar.[8][9]

Beginnings in politics Edit

 
Cavallo was Argentine Congressman, President of Central Bank and Minister of Economy two times.

His involvement in politics began when he was elected as a student representative to the highest government body of the Economics School (1965–1966). He acted as Undersecretary of Development of the provincial government (1969–1970), director (1971–1972) and vice chairman of the board (1972–1973) of the Provincial Bank and Undersecretary of Interior of the national government.

This controversy notwithstanding, upon Argentina's return to democracy in December 1983, he became a close economic advisor to Peronist politician José Manuel de la Sota and was elected as a Peronist deputy for Córdoba Province in the 1987 mid-term polls.

Drawing from his Fundación Mediterránea think-tank, he prepared an academic team for taking over the management of the economy, and to that end he participated actively in Carlos Menem's bid for the presidency in 1989. President Alfonsín's efforts to control hyperinflation (which reached 200% a month in July 1989) failed, and led to food riots and Alfonsín's resignation.

Minister of Foreign relations Edit

 
Cavallo with George H. W. Bush and Terence Todman in the Casa Rosada

As Foreign Minister, in 1989 he met with British Foreign Secretary John Major, this being the first such meeting since the end of the Falklands War seven years earlier.[10]

As Menem initially chose to deliver the Economy Ministry to senior executives of the firm Bunge y Born, Cavallo had to wait a few more years to put his economic theories into practice. He served as Menem's foreign minister, and was instrumental in the realignment of Argentina with the Washington Consensus advanced by U.S. President George H. W. Bush. Finally, after several false starts, and two further peaks of hyperinflation, Menem put Cavallo at the helm of the Argentine Economy Ministry in February, 1991.

Minister of Economy at the Menem administration Edit

 
Productivity per hour worked between 1991 and 1996 increased by 117%. More than any other country on any 5-year period since the start of the series in 1950.[2]

In May 1989, amid the worst economic crisis in the country's history, Carlos Menem was elected President of Argentina.[11]

Hyperinflation forced him to abandon peronist orthodoxy in favour of a fiscally conservative, market-oriented economic policy.[11]

Domingo Cavallo was appointed in 1991, and deepened the liberalization of the economy. He liberalized trade (by removing export taxes and reducing import duties, removing non-tariff barriers to imports, and removing restrictions on foreign investment).[12]

He reformed the State and recreated a market economy based on a reduction in public spending and the fiscal deficit (through the privatization of state companies; the elimination of price controls, wage controls and currency controls; and the elimination of trade subsidies).[13]

He reformed the tax policy to simplify taxes and reduce non-social government spending, and reached an agreement with the International Monetary Fund to achieve the path towards adherence to a Brady Plan a plan about the debt restructuring.

These reforms were a success: the capital flights ended, interest rates were lowered, inflation fell to single digits, and economic activity increased; in that year alone, the gross domestic product grew at a rate of 10,5%.[14][15]

He was the ideologist behind the Convertibility Plan, which created a currency board that fixed the dollar-peso exchange rate at 1 peso per US dollar; he signed his plan into law on April 1, 1991. Cavallo thus succeeded in defeating inflation, which had averaged over 220% (1975–1988), had leapt to 5000% (1989) and remained at 1300% (1990).[16]

 
Cavallo began the privatization of YPF.

President Menem had already privatized the state telecom concern and national airlines (the once-premier airline in Latin America, Aerolíneas Argentinas, which was later almost run into the ground). The stability Cavallo's plan helped bring about, however, opened prospects for more privatizations than ever. Going on to total over 200 state enterprises, these included: the costly state railroads concern, the state oil monopoly Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales, several public utilities, two government television stations, 10,000 km (6000 mi) of roads, steel and petrochemical firms, grain elevators, hotels, subways and even racetracks. A panoply of provincial and municipal banks were sold to financial giants abroad (sometimes over the opposition of their respective governors and mayors) and, taking a page from the Chile pension system privatization, the mandatory National Pension System was opened to choice through the authorization of private pension schemes.[17]

GDP, long stuck at its 1973 level even with a growing population, grew by about a third from early 1991 to late 1994. Fixed investment, depressed since the 1981–82 crisis, more than doubled during this period.

Consumers also benefited: income poverty fell by about half (to under 20%) and new auto sales (likewise depressed since 1982) jumped fivefold, to about 500,000 units. This boom, however, had its problems early on. Tight federal budgets kept the budget deficits of the provinces from improving and, though many benefited from Cavallo's insistence that large employers translate higher productivity into higher pay, this same productivity boom (as well as the nearly 200,000 layoffs the privatizations caused) helped unemployment jump from about 7% in 1991–92 to over 12%, by 1994.

The 1995 Mexican Crisis shocked consumer and business confidence and ratcheted joblessness to 18% (the highest since the 1930s). Confidence and the economy recovered relatively quickly; but, the consequences of double-digit unemployment soon created a crime wave that to some extent continues to this day. Unemployment and poverty eased only very slowly after the return to growth in early 1996.

Independent Edit

 
Cavallo, candidate for president in 1999

In mid-1995, Cavallo denounced the existence of presumed "mafias" entrenched within the circles of power. After his first public accusations, relations between Cavallo, President Menem and his colleagues became progressively strained.

In 1996, shortly after Menem's reelection, the flux of money from privatisation ceased, and Cavallo was ousted from the cabinet, due to his volatile personality and fights with other cabinet members, coupled with staggering unemployment and social unrest caused by his economic policies and the Mexican crisis. Following months of speculation, Menem asked for his resignation on July 26, 1996.[18]

Cavallo founded a political party, Action for the Republic, which allowed him to return to Congress since 1997, this time as a National Deputy for the City of Buenos Aires.

Cavallo ran for president in 1999, but was defeated by Fernando de la Rúa. Cavallo came in third place and received 11% of the vote, far behind both de la Rúa and the other main candidate, Peronist Eduardo Duhalde.

He also ran for Mayor of Buenos Aires in 2000, got second place and lost to Aníbal Ibarra.

Minister of Economy with de la Rúa and during the crisis Edit

 
de la Rúa and his Minister, in March 2001

Cavallo was called by President de la Rúa in March 2001 to lead the economy once again, in the face of a weakened coalition government and two years of recession.[19]

He attempted to restore business confidence by renegotiating the external debt with the International Monetary Fund and with bondholders, but the growing country risk and spiraling put options by large investors and foreign holdings led to a bank run and a massive capital flight. In late November 2001, Cavallo introduced a set of measures that blocked the usage of cash, informally known as the corralito ("financial corral"). The anger of those Argentines with the means to invest abroad created a framework for the popular middle-class protest termed the cacerolazo.

Political pressure by the Peronist opposition and other organized economic interests coincided with the December 2001 riots. This critical situation finally forced Cavallo, and then de la Rúa, to resign.[20]

A series of Peronist presidents came and left in the next few days, until Eduardo Duhalde, the opponent of De la Rua and Cavallo in the 1999 presidential election, took power on January 2, 2002. Soon afterwards the government decreed the end of peso-dollar convertibility, devalued the peso and soon afterwards let it float, which led to a swift depreciation (the exchange rate briefly reached 4 pesos per dollar in July 2002) and inflation (about 40% in 2002).

Cavallo's policies are viewed by opponents as major causes of the deindustrialization and the rise of unemployment, poverty and crime endured by Argentina in the late 1990s, as well as the collapse of 2001, the ensuing default of the Argentine public debt.

After the crisis Edit

 
Susana Malcorra met with former Foreign Relations Ministers, including Cavallo.

Between April and June 2002, Cavallo was jailed for alleged participation in illegal weapons sales during the Menem administration. He was exonerated of all charges related to this scandal in 2005.[21]

Cavallo served as the Robert Kennedy Visiting Professor in Latin American Studies in the department of economics at Harvard University from 2003 to 2004.

He has also continued to serve as a member of the influential Washington-based financial advisory body, the Group of Thirty.

As of January 2012, Cavallo is a senior fellow at the Jackson Institute for Global Affairs at Yale University as well as a visiting lecturer at Yale's economics department.

Cavallo returned to Córdoba Province in 2013 to run for Chamber of Deputies under the Es Posible ticket, led by center-right Peronist Alberto Rodríguez Saá.[22] Winning only 1.28% of the provincial vote, Cavallo failed to reach the required 1.5% threshold in the primaries elections, and was disqualified from the running for the general election in what the local press described as "an emphatic defeat."[23]

Criminal sentence Edit

On December 1, 2015, Cavallo, ex president Carlos Saul Menem, and ex justice minister Raúl Granillo Ocampo, were found guilty of embezzlement by the court Tribunal Oral Federal 4.[24][25]

Honour Edit

Foreign honour Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Graciela Kaminsky; Amine Mati; Nada Choueiri (November 2009). "Thirty Years of Currency Crises in Argentina External Shocks or Domestic Fragility?" (PDF). National Bureau of Economic Research.
  2. ^ a b Our World in Data based on Feenstra, Robert C., Robert Inklaar and Marcel P. Timmer (2015), "The Next Generation of the Penn World Table" American Economic Review, 105(10), 3150-3182, available for download at www.ggdc.net/pwt. PWT v9.1
  3. ^ "Argentina's collapse - A decline without parallel". The Economist. February 28, 2002.
  4. ^ "Domingo Cavallo: biography". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  5. ^ Noticias. 12 September 1991.
  6. ^ "El recuerdo de la Circular 1050". Clarín. April 14, 2002.
  7. ^ "Ordenan investigar si Cavallo debe devolver 17.000 millones de dólares". La Nación. September 16, 2011.
  8. ^ Cavallo, Domingo. Economía en Tiempos de Crisis. p. 25.
  9. ^ Argentina: From Insolvency to Growth. World Bank, 1993.
  10. ^ John Major (1999). John Major: The Autobiography. Harper Collins. p. 123.
  11. ^ a b "Carlos Menem | Biography & Facts".
  12. ^ Starr, Pamela K. (1997). "Government Coalitions and the Viability of Currency Boards: Argentina under the Cavallo Plan". Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs. 39 (2): 83–133. doi:10.2307/166512. JSTOR 166512.
  13. ^ "Server Error" (PDF).
  14. ^ "Finance and Development".
  15. ^ Saxton, Jim (June 2003). "ARGENTINA'S ECONOMIC CRISIS: CAUSES AND CURES" (PDF). United States Congressional Joint Economic Committee.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on June 19, 2009. Retrieved June 12, 2009.
  17. ^ Cavallo, Domingo; Runde, Sonia Cavallo (2017). Argentina's Economic Reforms of the 1990s in Contemporary and Historical Perspective. ISBN 978-1857438048.
  18. ^ Clarín. 27 July 1996 (in Spanish)
  19. ^ La Nación. 20 March 2001 25 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  20. ^ La Nación. 20 December 2001 5 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  21. ^ . La Crónica de Hoy. April 13, 2005. Archived from the original on August 6, 2016. Retrieved March 1, 2014.
  22. ^ "Unos regresaron con gloria; otros fracasaron". La Nación. August 13, 2013.
  23. ^ "Cavallo no llega a octubre en una elección cordobesa dominada por Schiaretti". La Prensa.
  24. ^ "Condenaron a Menem y Cavallo por el pago de sobresueldos".
  25. ^ "Condenan a prisión a Menem y a Cavallo por pagar sobresueldos, pero seguirán libres".
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on July 19, 2019. Retrieved August 24, 2018.

External links Edit

  • Personal homepage (in Spanish and English)
  • Appearances on C-SPAN

domingo, cavallo, domingo, felipe, cavallo, born, july, 1946, argentine, economist, politician, between, 1991, 1996, minister, economy, during, carlos, menem, presidency, known, implementing, convertibility, plan, which, established, pseudo, currency, board, w. Domingo Felipe Cavallo born July 21 1946 is an Argentine economist and politician Between 1991 and 1996 he was the Minister of Economy during Carlos Menem s presidency He is known for implementing the convertibility plan which established a pseudo currency board with the United States dollar and allowed the dollar to be used for legal contracts This brought the inflation rate down from over 1 300 in 1990 to less than 20 in 1992 and nearly to zero during the rest of the 1990s 1 He implemented pro market reforms which included privatizations of state enterprises Productivity per hour worked during his five years as minister of Menem increased by more than 100 2 In 2001 he was the economy minister for nine months during the 1998 2002 Argentine great depression During a bank run he implemented a restriction on cash withdrawing known as corralito This was followed by the December 2001 riots in Argentina and the fall of Fernando de la Rua as president 3 Domingo CavalloMinister of EconomyIn office 20 March 2001 20 December 2001PresidentFernando de la RuaPreceded byRicardo Lopez MurphySucceeded byJorge CapitanichIn office 1 February 1991 6 August 1996PresidentCarlos MenemPreceded byAntonio Erman GonzalezSucceeded byRoque FernandezMinister of Foreign AffairsIn office July 8 1989 January 31 1991PresidentCarlos MenemPreceded bySusana Ruiz CerrutiSucceeded byGuido di TellaPresident of the Central Bank of ArgentinaIn office July 2 1982 August 26 1982PresidentReynaldo BignonePreceded byEgidio IannellaSucceeded byJulio Gonzalez del SolarNational DeputyIn office December 10 1997 March 20 2001ConstituencyCity of Buenos AiresIn office December 10 1987 December 10 1989ConstituencyCordobaPersonal detailsBornDomingo Felipe Cavallo 1946 07 21 July 21 1946 age 77 San Francisco Cordoba ArgentinaPolitical partyJusticialist Party 1983 1996 Action for the Republic 1996 2005 Is Possible Party es 2013 SpouseSonia AbrazianAlma materNational University of CordobaHarvard UniversityWebsiteOfficial websiteCavallo is a Doctor in Economic Sciences from the National University of Cordoba and obtained his PhD in Economics from Harvard University He received five Honoris Causa doctorates from Genoa Turin Bologna Ben Gurion and Paris Pantheon Sorbonne universities He was professor at the National and Catholic Universities of Cordoba and at New York Harvard and Yale universities 4 Contents 1 Early years 2 Central Bank 3 Beginnings in politics 4 Minister of Foreign relations 5 Minister of Economy at the Menem administration 6 Independent 7 Minister of Economy with de la Rua and during the crisis 8 After the crisis 9 Criminal sentence 10 Honour 10 1 Foreign honour 11 References 12 External linksEarly years EditCavallo was born in San Francisco Cordoba Province to Florencia and Felipe Cavallo Italian Argentine immigrants from the Piedmont Region He graduated with honors in Accounting 1967 and Economics 1968 at the National University of Cordoba where he earned his doctorate in economics in 1970 He married the former Sonia Abrazian in 1968 and had three children He would later enroll at Harvard University where he earned a second doctorate in Economics in 1977 5 Cavallo taught at the National University of Cordoba 1969 84 the Catholic University of Cordoba 1970 74 and New York University 1996 97 He wrote a number of books and was publisher of Forbes in 1998 99 Central Bank EditIn July 1982 after the Falklands War fiasco brought more moderate leadership to the military dictatorship Cavallo was appointed president of the Central Bank He inherited the country s most acute financial and economic crisis since 1930 and a particularly heinous Central Bank regulation painfully remembered as the Central Bank Circular 1050 Implemented in 1980 at the behest of conservative Minister of Economy Jose Alfredo Martinez de Hoz policy tied adjustable loan installments nearly all lending in Argentina is on an adjustable interest basis to the value of the US dollar locally Exchange rates were controlled at the time and therefore raised little concern The next February however the peso was sharply devalued and continued to plummet for the rest of 1981 and into 1982 Mortgage and business borrowers saw their monthly installments increase over tenfold in just a year and many including homeowners just months away from paying off their loans unable to keep up either lost their entire equity or everything outright 6 Cavallo immediately rescinded the hated Circular 1050 and as a result saved millions of homeowners and small business owners from financial ruin as well as millions more indirectly What followed however remained the subject of great controversy 7 Though nothing new to the economic history of Argentina he is often accused of implementing financial policies that may have allowed Argentina s main private enterprises to transfer their debts to the state transforming their private debt into public obligations During 1982 and 1983 more than 200 firms 30 economic groups and 106 transnational enterprises transferred a great part of their 17 billion dollar debt to the federal government thanks to secured exchange rates on loan installments This fraud took place both before and after his very brief turn at the Central Bank but not while he was in charge In a speech in September 1982 he was forced renounce and express his opposition to the transfer of debt to the state He inherited this practice from Martinez de Hoz himself whose chief interest steelmaker Acindar had unloaded US 700 million of its debts in this way Moreover Cavallo subjected payments covered by these exchange rate guarantees to indexation this latter stipulation was dropped by his successor Julio Gonzalez del Solar 8 9 Beginnings in politics Edit nbsp Cavallo was Argentine Congressman President of Central Bank and Minister of Economy two times His involvement in politics began when he was elected as a student representative to the highest government body of the Economics School 1965 1966 He acted as Undersecretary of Development of the provincial government 1969 1970 director 1971 1972 and vice chairman of the board 1972 1973 of the Provincial Bank and Undersecretary of Interior of the national government This controversy notwithstanding upon Argentina s return to democracy in December 1983 he became a close economic advisor to Peronist politician Jose Manuel de la Sota and was elected as a Peronist deputy for Cordoba Province in the 1987 mid term polls Drawing from his Fundacion Mediterranea think tank he prepared an academic team for taking over the management of the economy and to that end he participated actively in Carlos Menem s bid for the presidency in 1989 President Alfonsin s efforts to control hyperinflation which reached 200 a month in July 1989 failed and led to food riots and Alfonsin s resignation Minister of Foreign relations Edit nbsp Cavallo with George H W Bush and Terence Todman in the Casa RosadaAs Foreign Minister in 1989 he met with British Foreign Secretary John Major this being the first such meeting since the end of the Falklands War seven years earlier 10 As Menem initially chose to deliver the Economy Ministry to senior executives of the firm Bunge y Born Cavallo had to wait a few more years to put his economic theories into practice He served as Menem s foreign minister and was instrumental in the realignment of Argentina with the Washington Consensus advanced by U S President George H W Bush Finally after several false starts and two further peaks of hyperinflation Menem put Cavallo at the helm of the Argentine Economy Ministry in February 1991 Minister of Economy at the Menem administration Edit nbsp Productivity per hour worked between 1991 and 1996 increased by 117 More than any other country on any 5 year period since the start of the series in 1950 2 In May 1989 amid the worst economic crisis in the country s history Carlos Menem was elected President of Argentina 11 Hyperinflation forced him to abandon peronist orthodoxy in favour of a fiscally conservative market oriented economic policy 11 Domingo Cavallo was appointed in 1991 and deepened the liberalization of the economy He liberalized trade by removing export taxes and reducing import duties removing non tariff barriers to imports and removing restrictions on foreign investment 12 He reformed the State and recreated a market economy based on a reduction in public spending and the fiscal deficit through the privatization of state companies the elimination of price controls wage controls and currency controls and the elimination of trade subsidies 13 He reformed the tax policy to simplify taxes and reduce non social government spending and reached an agreement with the International Monetary Fund to achieve the path towards adherence to a Brady Plan a plan about the debt restructuring These reforms were a success the capital flights ended interest rates were lowered inflation fell to single digits and economic activity increased in that year alone the gross domestic product grew at a rate of 10 5 14 15 He was the ideologist behind the Convertibility Plan which created a currency board that fixed the dollar peso exchange rate at 1 peso per US dollar he signed his plan into law on April 1 1991 Cavallo thus succeeded in defeating inflation which had averaged over 220 1975 1988 had leapt to 5000 1989 and remained at 1300 1990 16 nbsp Cavallo began the privatization of YPF President Menem had already privatized the state telecom concern and national airlines the once premier airline in Latin America Aerolineas Argentinas which was later almost run into the ground The stability Cavallo s plan helped bring about however opened prospects for more privatizations than ever Going on to total over 200 state enterprises these included the costly state railroads concern the state oil monopoly Yacimientos Petroliferos Fiscales several public utilities two government television stations 10 000 km 6000 mi of roads steel and petrochemical firms grain elevators hotels subways and even racetracks A panoply of provincial and municipal banks were sold to financial giants abroad sometimes over the opposition of their respective governors and mayors and taking a page from the Chile pension system privatization the mandatory National Pension System was opened to choice through the authorization of private pension schemes 17 GDP long stuck at its 1973 level even with a growing population grew by about a third from early 1991 to late 1994 Fixed investment depressed since the 1981 82 crisis more than doubled during this period Consumers also benefited income poverty fell by about half to under 20 and new auto sales likewise depressed since 1982 jumped fivefold to about 500 000 units This boom however had its problems early on Tight federal budgets kept the budget deficits of the provinces from improving and though many benefited from Cavallo s insistence that large employers translate higher productivity into higher pay this same productivity boom as well as the nearly 200 000 layoffs the privatizations caused helped unemployment jump from about 7 in 1991 92 to over 12 by 1994 The 1995 Mexican Crisis shocked consumer and business confidence and ratcheted joblessness to 18 the highest since the 1930s Confidence and the economy recovered relatively quickly but the consequences of double digit unemployment soon created a crime wave that to some extent continues to this day Unemployment and poverty eased only very slowly after the return to growth in early 1996 Independent Edit nbsp Cavallo candidate for president in 1999In mid 1995 Cavallo denounced the existence of presumed mafias entrenched within the circles of power After his first public accusations relations between Cavallo President Menem and his colleagues became progressively strained In 1996 shortly after Menem s reelection the flux of money from privatisation ceased and Cavallo was ousted from the cabinet due to his volatile personality and fights with other cabinet members coupled with staggering unemployment and social unrest caused by his economic policies and the Mexican crisis Following months of speculation Menem asked for his resignation on July 26 1996 18 Cavallo founded a political party Action for the Republic which allowed him to return to Congress since 1997 this time as a National Deputy for the City of Buenos Aires Cavallo ran for president in 1999 but was defeated by Fernando de la Rua Cavallo came in third place and received 11 of the vote far behind both de la Rua and the other main candidate Peronist Eduardo Duhalde He also ran for Mayor of Buenos Aires in 2000 got second place and lost to Anibal Ibarra Minister of Economy with de la Rua and during the crisis Edit nbsp de la Rua and his Minister in March 2001Cavallo was called by President de la Rua in March 2001 to lead the economy once again in the face of a weakened coalition government and two years of recession 19 He attempted to restore business confidence by renegotiating the external debt with the International Monetary Fund and with bondholders but the growing country risk and spiraling put options by large investors and foreign holdings led to a bank run and a massive capital flight In late November 2001 Cavallo introduced a set of measures that blocked the usage of cash informally known as the corralito financial corral The anger of those Argentines with the means to invest abroad created a framework for the popular middle class protest termed the cacerolazo Political pressure by the Peronist opposition and other organized economic interests coincided with the December 2001 riots This critical situation finally forced Cavallo and then de la Rua to resign 20 A series of Peronist presidents came and left in the next few days until Eduardo Duhalde the opponent of De la Rua and Cavallo in the 1999 presidential election took power on January 2 2002 Soon afterwards the government decreed the end of peso dollar convertibility devalued the peso and soon afterwards let it float which led to a swift depreciation the exchange rate briefly reached 4 pesos per dollar in July 2002 and inflation about 40 in 2002 Cavallo s policies are viewed by opponents as major causes of the deindustrialization and the rise of unemployment poverty and crime endured by Argentina in the late 1990s as well as the collapse of 2001 the ensuing default of the Argentine public debt After the crisis Edit nbsp Susana Malcorra met with former Foreign Relations Ministers including Cavallo Between April and June 2002 Cavallo was jailed for alleged participation in illegal weapons sales during the Menem administration He was exonerated of all charges related to this scandal in 2005 21 Cavallo served as the Robert Kennedy Visiting Professor in Latin American Studies in the department of economics at Harvard University from 2003 to 2004 He has also continued to serve as a member of the influential Washington based financial advisory body the Group of Thirty As of January 2012 Cavallo is a senior fellow at the Jackson Institute for Global Affairs at Yale University as well as a visiting lecturer at Yale s economics department Cavallo returned to Cordoba Province in 2013 to run for Chamber of Deputies under the Es Posible ticket led by center right Peronist Alberto Rodriguez Saa 22 Winning only 1 28 of the provincial vote Cavallo failed to reach the required 1 5 threshold in the primaries elections and was disqualified from the running for the general election in what the local press described as an emphatic defeat 23 Criminal sentence EditOn December 1 2015 Cavallo ex president Carlos Saul Menem and ex justice minister Raul Granillo Ocampo were found guilty of embezzlement by the court Tribunal Oral Federal 4 24 25 Honour EditForeign honour Edit nbsp Malaysia Honorary Commander of the Order of the Defender of the Realm P M N 1994 26 References Edit Graciela Kaminsky Amine Mati Nada Choueiri November 2009 Thirty Years of Currency Crises in Argentina External Shocks or Domestic Fragility PDF National Bureau of Economic Research a b Our World in Data based on Feenstra Robert C Robert Inklaar and Marcel P Timmer 2015 The Next Generation of the Penn World Table American Economic Review 105 10 3150 3182 available for download at www ggdc net pwt PWT v9 1 Argentina s collapse A decline without parallel The Economist February 28 2002 Domingo Cavallo biography Encyclopaedia Britannica Noticias 12 September 1991 El recuerdo de la Circular 1050 Clarin April 14 2002 Ordenan investigar si Cavallo debe devolver 17 000 millones de dolares La Nacion September 16 2011 Cavallo Domingo Economia en Tiempos de Crisis p 25 Argentina From Insolvency to Growth World Bank 1993 John Major 1999 John Major The Autobiography Harper Collins p 123 a b Carlos Menem Biography amp Facts Starr Pamela K 1997 Government Coalitions and the Viability of Currency Boards Argentina under the Cavallo Plan Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 39 2 83 133 doi 10 2307 166512 JSTOR 166512 Server Error PDF Finance and Development Saxton Jim June 2003 ARGENTINA S ECONOMIC CRISIS CAUSES AND CURES PDF United States Congressional Joint Economic Committee INDEC consumer prices Archived from the original on June 19 2009 Retrieved June 12 2009 Cavallo Domingo Runde Sonia Cavallo 2017 Argentina s Economic Reforms of the 1990s in Contemporary and Historical Perspective ISBN 978 1857438048 Clarin 27 July 1996 in Spanish La Nacion 20 March 2001 Archived 25 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish La Nacion 20 December 2001 Archived 5 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Alivio para Menem y Cavallo en causa por contrabando de armas La Cronica de Hoy April 13 2005 Archived from the original on August 6 2016 Retrieved March 1 2014 Unos regresaron con gloria otros fracasaron La Nacion August 13 2013 Cavallo no llega a octubre en una eleccion cordobesa dominada por Schiaretti La Prensa Condenaron a Menem y Cavallo por el pago de sobresueldos Condenan a prision a Menem y a Cavallo por pagar sobresueldos pero seguiran libres Semakan Penerima Darjah Kebesaran Bintang dan Pingat Archived from the original on July 19 2019 Retrieved August 24 2018 External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Domingo Cavallo nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Domingo Cavallo Personal homepage in Spanish and English Appearances on C SPANPreceded byAntonio Erman Gonzalez Minister of Economy1991 1996 Succeeded byRoque FernandezPreceded byRicardo Lopez Murphy Minister of Economy2001 Succeeded byJorge Capitanich Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Domingo Cavallo amp oldid 1171562459, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.