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Economy of Argentina

The economy of Argentina is the second-largest national economy in South America, behind Brazil. Argentina is a developing country with a highly literate population, an export-oriented agricultural sector, and a diversified industrial base.

Economy of Argentina
CurrencyArgentine peso (ARS)
Calendar year
Trade organizations
WTO, Mercosur, Prosur, G-20
Country group
Statistics
Population 46,044,703 (2022)[3]
GDP
GDP rank
GDP growth
  • 5.2% (2022)
  • 0.2% (2023)
  • 2.0% (2024)[4]
GDP per capita
  • $13,700 (nominal; 2023)[4]
  • $27,300 (PPP; 2023)[4]
GDP per capita rank
GDP by sector
  • Agriculture, forestry, and fishing: 6.0%
  • mining: 3.6%
  • manufacturing: 17.2%
  • construction: 5.6%
  • commerce and tourism: 16.9%
  • transport, communications, and utilities: 7.9%
  • government: 9.5%
  • business, social and other services: 33.3%.
  • (2015)[5]
Population below poverty line
42 medium (2021)[10]
Labor force
  • 21,339,080 (2022)[13]
  • 55.1% employment rate (2021)[14]
Labor force by occupation
  • Agricultural 7.3%
  • manufacturing 13.1%
  • construction 7.6%
  • commerce and tourism 21.4%
  • transport, communications and utilities 7.8%
  • financial, real estate and business service, 9.4%
  • public administration and defense 6.3%
  • social services and other 27.1% (2006)
[15]
Unemployment
Average gross salary
AR$87,987 monthly (June 2023)[18]
Main industries
External
Exports $88.44 billion (2022)[19]
Export goods
Soybeans and derivatives, petroleum and gas, vehicles, corn, wheat
Main export partners

(2022)[20]

Imports $81.52 billion (2022)[21]
Import goods
Machinery, motor vehicles, petroleum and natural gas, organic chemicals, plastics
Main import partners
FDI stock
  • $76.58 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[22]
  • Abroad: $40.94 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[22]
−$31.32 billion (2017 est.)[22]
  • $214.9 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[22]
  • $163.2 billion; of which public, $92.5 billion (March 2016)[23]
Public finances
  • 102% of GDP (2021)[24]
  • $271.5 billion (bonds, 68%); 44.8% of GDP (December 2021)[23]
−6% (of GDP) (2017 est.)[22]
Revenues
  • 120.6 billion (2017 est.)[22]
  • $142.9 billion (2015) (social security, 25.9%; income and capital gains, 23.6%; value-added sales tax, 20.1%; trade and duties, 15.1%; financial tax, 6.3%; excise and other, 9.0%)[25]
Expenses
  • 158.6 billion (2017 est.)[22]
  • $167.3 billion (2015) (social security, 38.8%; subsidies and infrastructure, 22.5%; debt service, 9.2%; education, culture and research, 8.8%; social assistance, 5.4%; health, 3.4%; security, 3.1%; defense, 2.1%; other, 6.7%)[25][26]
  • $44.78 billion (30 December 2019)[22]
Main data source: CIA World Fact Book
All values, unless otherwise stated, are in US dollars.

Argentina benefits from rich natural resources. Argentina's economic performance has historically been very uneven, with high economic growth alternating with severe recessions, particularly since the late twentieth century. Income maldistribution and poverty have increased since this period. Early in the twentieth century, Argentina had one of the ten highest per capita GDP levels globally. It was on par with Canada and Australia, and had surpassed both France and Italy.

Argentina's currency declined by about 50% in 2018 to more than 38 Argentine pesos per U.S. Dollar. As of that year, it is under a stand-by program from the International Monetary Fund. In 2019, the currency fell further by 25%. In 2020, it fell by 90%, in 2021, 68%,[28] and a further 52% in 2022 (until July 20).[29]

Argentina is considered an emerging market by the FTSE Global Equity Index (2018), and one of the G-20 major economies. In 2021, MCSI re-classified Argentina as a standalone market due to prolonged severe capital controls.[30]

History Edit

Before the 1880s, Argentina was a relatively isolated backwater, dependent on the salted meat, wool, leather, and hide industries for both the more significant part of its foreign exchange and the generation of domestic income and profits. The Argentine economy began to experience swift growth after 1880 through the export of livestock and grain raw materials, and British and French investment, marking the beginning of a fifty-year era of significant economic expansion and mass European immigration.

From 1880 to 1905, this expansion resulted in a 7.5-fold growth in GDP during its most vigorous period, averaging about 8% annually. One important measure of development, GDP per capita, rose from 35% of the United States average to about 80% during that period. Growth then slowed considerably, such that by 1941 Argentina's real per capita GDP was roughly half that of the U.S. Even so, from 1890 to 1950, the country's per capita income was similar to that of Western Europe; although income in Argentina remained considerably less evenly distributed. According to a study by Baten and Pelger and Twrdek (2009), where the authors compare anthropometric values, i.e., height with real wages, Argentina's GDP increased for the decades after 1870. Before 1910 however, the heights have been left unaffected. This, in turn, suggests that the increase in the population's welfare did not occur during the income expansion of the given period.

The Great Depression caused Argentine GDP to fall by a fourth between 1929 and 1932. Having recovered its lost ground by the late 1930s partly through import substitution, the economy continued to grow modestly during World War II (contrary to the recession caused by the previous world war). The war led to reduced availability of imports and higher prices for Argentine exports that combined to create a US$1.6 billion cumulative surplus, a third of which was blocked as inconvertible deposits in the Bank of England by the Roca–Runciman Treaty. Benefiting from innovative self-financing and government loans alike, value-added in manufacturing nevertheless surpassed that of agriculture for the first time in 1943, employed over 1 million by 1947, and allowed the need for imported consumer goods to decline from 40% of the total to 10% by 1950.

The populist administration of Juan Perón nationalized the Central Bank, railways, and other strategic industries and services from 1945 to 1955. The subsequent enactment of developmentalism after 1958, though partial, was followed by a good fifteen years. Inflation first became a chronic problem during this period (it averaged 26% annually from 1944 to 1974); but though it did not become fully "developed," from 1932 to 1974, Argentina's economy grew almost fivefold (or 3.8% in annual terms) while its population only doubled. While unremarkable, this expansion was well-distributed and so resulted in several noteworthy changes in Argentine society —most notably the development of the largest proportional middle class (40% of the population by the 1960s) in Latin America as well as the region's highest-paid, most unionized working class.

However, the economy declined during the military dictatorship from 1976 to 1983 and for some time afterward. The dictatorship's chief economist, José Alfredo Martínez de Hoz, advanced a corrupt, anti-labor policy of financial liberalization that increased the debt burden and interrupted industrial development and upward social mobility. Over 400,000 companies of all sizes went bankrupt by 1982, and neoliberal economic policies prevailing from 1983 through 2001 failed to reverse the situation.

 
Historical development of GDP per capita

Record foreign debt interest payments, tax evasion, and capital flight resulted in a balance of payments crisis that plagued Argentina with severe stagflation from 1975 to 1990, including a bout of hyperinflation in 1989 and 1990. Attempting to remedy this situation, economist Domingo Cavallo pegged the peso to the U.S. dollar in 1991 and limited the money supply's growth. His team then embarked on a path of trade liberalization, deregulation, and privatization. Inflation dropped to single digits, and GDP grew by one third in four years.

External economic shocks and a dependency on volatile short-term capital and debt to maintain the overvalued fixed exchange rate diluted benefits, causing erratic economic growth from 1995 and the eventual collapse in 2001. That year and the next, the economy suffered its sharpest decline since 1930; by 2002, Argentina had defaulted on its debt. Its GDP had declined by nearly 20% in four years, unemployment reached 25%, and the peso had depreciated 70% after being devalued and floated.

Argentina's socio-economic situation has since been steadily improving. Expansionary policies and raw materials exports triggered a rebound in GDP from 2003 onward. This trend has been primarily maintained, creating over five million jobs and encouraging domestic consumption and fixed investment. Social programs were strengthened, and a number of important firms privatized during the 1990s were renationalized beginning in 2003. These include the postal service, ASA (the water utility serving Buenos Aires), Pension funds (transferred to ANSES), Aerolíneas Argentinas, the energy firm YPF, and the railways.

The economy nearly doubled from 2002 to 2011, growing an average of 7.1% annually and around 9% for five consecutive years between 2003 and 2007. Real wages rose by around 72% from their low point in 2003 to 2013. The global recession did affect the economy in 2009, with growth slowing to nearly zero; but high economic growth then resumed, and GDP expanded by around 9% in both 2010 and 2011. Foreign exchange controls, austerity measures, persistent inflation, and downturns in Brazil, Europe, and other important trade partners, contributed to slower growth beginning in 2012, however. Growth averaged just 1.3% from 2012 to 2014, and rose to 2.4% in 2015.

The Argentine government bond market is based on GDP-linked bonds, and investors, both foreign and domestic, netted record yields amid renewed growth. Argentine debt restructuring offers in 2005 and 2010 resumed payments on the majority of its almost US$100 billion in defaulted bonds and other debt from 2001.

 
Historical growth of Argentina from 1961 to 2016

Holdouts controlling 7% of the bonds, including some small investors, hedge funds, and vulture funds led by Paul Singer's Cayman Islands-based NML Capital Limited, rejected the 2005 and 2010 offer to exchange their defaulted bonds. Singer, who demanded US$832 million for Argentine bonds purchased for US$49 million in the secondary market in 2008, attempted to seize Argentine government assets abroad and sued to stop payments from Argentina to the 93% who had accepted the earlier swaps despite the steep discount. According to estimates by Morgan Stanley, bondholders who instead accepted the 2005 offer of 30 cents on the dollar had by 2012 received returns of about 90%. Argentina settled with virtually all holdouts in February 2016 at the cost of US$9.3 billion; NML received US$2.4 billion, a 392% return on the original value of the bonds.

While the Argentine Government considers debt leftover from illegitimate governments unconstitutional odious debt, it has continued servicing this debt despite the annual cost of around US$14 billion and despite being nearly locked out of international credit markets with annual bond issues since 2002 averaging less than US$2 billion (which precludes most debt rollover).

Nevertheless, Argentina has continued to hold successful bond issues, as the country's stock market, consumer confidence, and overall economy continue to grow. The country's successful, US$16.5 billion bond sale in April 2016 was the largest in emerging market history.

In May 2018, Argentina's government asked the International Monetary Fund for its intervention, with an emergency loan for a $30 billion bailout, as reported by Bloomberg.

In May 2018, the official estimated inflation had peaked up to 25 percent a year, and on 4 May Argentina's central bank raised interest rates on pesos to 40 percent from 27.25 percent, which is the highest in the world, since the national currency had lost 18% of its value since the beginning of the year.

In 2019 the inflation was considered the highest in 28 years according to the index, ascending to 53.8%.

To the cause of the quarantine in 2020, in April, 143,000 SMEs will not be able to pay salaries and fixed expenses for the month, even with government assistance, so they will have to borrow or increase their capital contribution, and approximately 35,000 companies consider closing their business. even so, the president remains firm in his decision to maintain the state of total quarantine. Despite cuts in the payment chain, some project 180 total days and calculate 5% of companies that fell in May.

In 2023, the rate of inflation in Argentina surpassed 100% for the first time since the early 1990s.[31]

Data Edit

 
Argentina Inflation
  Year over Year inflation
  M2 money supply increases Year over Year
  Month over Month inflation

The following table shows the main economic indicators in 1980–2021 (with IMF staff estimates in 2022–2027). Inflation below 5% is in green.[32]

Year GDP

(in Bil. US$PPP)

GDP per capita

(in US$ PPP)

GDP

(in Bil. US$nominal)

GDP per capita

(in US$ nominal)

GDP growth

(real)

Inflation rate

(in Percent)

Unemployment

(in Percent)

Government debt

(in % of GDP)

1980 172.5 6,172.5 233.7 8,361.2   0.7% n/a 3.0% n/a
1981   178.0   6,256.5   189.8   6,671.4   -5.7% n/a   5.0% n/a
1982   183.0   6,327.2   94.3   3,257.9   -3.1% n/a   4.5% n/a
1983   197.3   6,725.1   116.3   3,962.7   3.7% n/a   5.0% n/a
1984   208.5   6,988.1   130.5   4,374.8   2.0% n/a   5.0% n/a
1985   200.2   6,595.2   98.6   3,248.7   -7.0% n/a   6.3% n/a
1986   218.8   7,117.3   118.6   3,857.0   7.1% n/a   6.3% n/a
1987   229.9   7,393.6   121.6   3,910.0   2.5% n/a   6.0% n/a
1988   233.3   7,413.9   142.4   4,524.5   -2.0% n/a   6.5% n/a
1989   225.5   7,077.1   91.4   2,867.3   -7.0% n/a   8.0% n/a
1990   230.8   7,094.5   158.0   4,857.8   -1.3% n/a   7.6% n/a
1991   263.6   7,996.3   212.0   6,429.5   10.5% n/a   6.5% n/a
1992   297.4   8,899.4   255.8   7,653.7   10.3% n/a   7.1% 25.0%
1993   323.5   9,537.8   264.4   7,796.2   6.3% n/a   11.6%   26.9%
1994   349.7   10,178.7   287.8   8,378.7   5.8% n/a   13.3%   28.4%
1995   346.8   9,972.8   288.5   8,295.1   -2.8% n/a   18.9%   30.7%
1996   372.7   10,589.9   304.3   8,645.5   5.5% n/a   18.8%   32.6%
1997   409.9   11,512.5   327.4   9,196.5   8.1% n/a   16.8%   31.7%
1998   430.5   11,955.7   334.2   9,283.2   3.9%   0.9%   14.8%   34.1%
1999   421.8   11,587.1   317.0   8,709.1   -3.4%   -1.2%   16.1%   38.9%
2000   427.9   11,633.0   317.8   8,638.5   -0.8%   -0.9%   17.1%   40.8%
2001   418.3   11,256.7   300.4   8,085.4   -4.4%   -1.1%   19.2%   48.0%
2002   378.5   10,089.1   112.5   2,997.6   -10.9%   25.9%   22.5%   147.2%
2003   420.5   11,104.7   142.4   3,761.1   9.0%   13.4%   17.3%   125.2%
2004   470.3   12,303.2   164.9   4,314.1   8.9%   4.4%   13.6%   117.9%
2005   528.0   13,681.2   199.3   5,163.6   8.9%   9.6%   11.6%   80.3%
2006   588.1   15,090.3   232.9   5,976.1   8.0%   10.9%   10.2%   70.8%
2007   658.4   16,728.5   287.9   7,315.7   9.0%   8.8%   8.5%   62.1%
2008   698.2   17,567.3   363.5   9,146.8   4.1%   8.6%   7.9%   53.8%
2009   661.1   16,472.3   334.6   8,337.8   -5.9%   6.3%   8.7%   55.4%
2010   736.8   18,063.9   424.7   10,413.0   10.1%   10.5%   7.8%   43.5%
2011   797.3   19,322.2   527.6   12,787.8   6.0%   9.8%   7.2%   38.9%
2012   819.7   19,641.4   579.7   13,889.8   -1.0%   10.0%   7.2%   40.4%
2013   849.6   20,131.7   611.5   14,488.8   2.4%   10.6%   7.1%   43.5%
2014   839.9   19,683.8   563.6   13,208.8   -2.5% n/a   7.3%   44.7%
2015   867.2   20,105.2   642.5   14,895.3   2.7% n/a   6.5%   52.6%
2016   885.2   20,307.9   556.8   12,772.9   -2.1% n/a   8.5%   53.1%
2017   1,039.3   23,597.1   643.9   14,618.3   2.8%   25.7%   8.4%   57.0%
2018   1,036.3   23,290.6   524.4   11,786.4   -2.6%   34.3%   9.2%   85.2%
2019   1,033.7   23,003.3   451.8   10,054.0   -2.0%   53.5%   9.8%   88.8%
2020   942.2   20,758.1   389.1   8,571.9   -9.9%   42.0%   11.6%   102.8%
2021   1,083.4   23,632.5   486.7   10,616.9   10.4%   48.4%   8.7%   80.9%
2022   1,207.2   26,073.8   630.7   13,621.9   4.0%   94.8%   6.9%   76.0%
2023   1,275.5   27,276.6   643.8   13,767.1   2.0%   76.1%   6.9%   69.5%
2024   1,328.6   28,130.0   642.7   13,607.5   2.0%   51.2%   6.9%   69.6%
2025   1,380.4   28,936.6   625.7   13,116.4   2.0%   40.8%   6.9%   70.0%
2026   1,434.8   29,779.5   633.3   13,144.0   2.0%   37.1%   6.9%   67.1%
2027   1,491.8   30,656.3   662.4   13,612.5   2.0%   32.2%   6.9%   63.8%

Sectors Edit

Agriculture Edit

 
Soy field in Argentina's fertile Pampas. The versatile legume makes up about half the nation's crop production.
 
Vineyard in Mendoza Province. The country is the fifth largest producer in the world.[33]

Argentina is one of the world's major agricultural producers, ranking among the top producers in most of the following, exporters of beef, citrus fruit, grapes, honey, maize, sorghum, soybeans, squash, sunflower seeds, wheat, and yerba mate.[34] Agriculture accounted for 9% of GDP in 2010, and around one fifth of all exports (not including processed food and feed, which are another third). Commercial harvests reached 103 million tons in 2010, of which over 54 million were oilseeds (mainly soy and sunflower), and over 46 million were cereals (mainly maize, wheat, and sorghum).[35]

Argentina is the largest producer in the world of yerba mate, one of the 5 largest producers in the world of soy, maize, sunflower seed, lemon and pear, one of the 10 largest producers in the world of barley, grape, artichoke, tobacco and cotton, and one of the 15 largest producers in the world of wheat, sugarcane, sorghum and grapefruit.[36]

In 2018, Argentina was the 3rd largest producer of soy in the world, with 37.7 million tons produced (behind only the US and Brazil); the 4th largest producer of maize in the world, with 43.5 million tons produced (behind only the US, China and Brazil); the 12th largest producer of wheat in the world, with 18.5 million tons produced; the 11th largest producer in the world of sorghum, with 1.5 million tons produced; the 10th largest producer of grape in the world, with 1.9 million tons produced, besides having produced 19 million tons of sugarcane, mainly in the province of Tucumán[37] - Argentina produces near 2 million tons of sugar with the produced cane. In the same year Argentina produced 4.1 million tons of barley, being one of the 20 largest producers in the world of this cereal.[38] The country is also one of the world's largest producers of sunflower seed: in 2010, it was the 3rd largest producer in the world with 2.2 million tons.[39] In 2018, Argentina also produced 2.3 million tons of potato, almost 2 million tons of lemon, 1.3 million tons of rice, 1 million tons of orange, 921 thousand tons of peanut, 813 thousand tons of cotton, 707 thousand tons of onion, 656 thousand tons of tomato, 565 thousand tons of pear, 510 thousand tons of apple, 491 thousand tons of oats, 473 thousand tons of beans, 431 thousand tons of tangerine, 302 thousand tons of yerba mate, 283 thousand tons of carrot, 226 thousand tons of peach, 194 thousand tons of cassava, 174 thousand tons of olives, 174 thousand tons of banana, 148 thousand tons of garlic, 114 thousand tons of grapefruit, 110 thousand tons of artichoke, in addition to smaller productions of other agricultural products.[40]

In livestock, Argentina was, in 2019, the 4th world producer of beef, with a production of 3 million tons (only behind USA, Brazil and China), the 4th world producer of honey, the 10th world producer of wool, the world's 13th largest producer of chicken meat, the world's 23rd largest producer of pork, the 18th largest producer of cow's milk and the world's 14th largest producer of chicken egg.[41]

Soy and its byproducts, mainly animal feed and vegetable oils, are major export raw materials with one fourth of the total; cereals added another 10%. Cattle-raising is also a major industry, though mostly for domestic consumption; beef, leather and dairy were 5% of total exports.[42] Sheep-raising and wool are important in Patagonia, though these activities have declined by half since 1990. Biodiesel, however, has become one of the fastest growing agro-industrial activities, with over US$2 billion in exports in 2011.[42]

Fruits and vegetables made up 4% of exports: apples and pears in the Río Negro valley; rice, oranges and other citrus in the northwest and Mesopotamia; grapes and strawberries in Cuyo (the west), and berries in the far south. Cotton and tobacco are major crops in the Gran Chaco, sugarcane and chile peppers in the northwest, and olives and garlic in the west. Yerba mate tea (Misiones), tomatoes (Salta) and peaches (Mendoza) are grown for domestic consumption. Organic farming is growing in Argentina, and the nearly 3 million hectares (7.5 million acres) of organic cultivation is second only to Australia.[43] Argentina is the world's fifth-largest wine producer,[44] and fine wine production has taken major leaps in quality. A growing export, total viticulture potential is far from having been met. Mendoza is the largest wine region, followed by San Juan.[45]

Government policy towards the lucrative agrarian sector is a subject of, at times, contentious debate in Argentina. A grain embargo by farmers protesting an increase in export taxes for their products began in March 2008,[46] and, following a series of failed negotiations, strikes and lockouts largely subsided only with the 16 July, defeat of the export tax-hike in the Senate.[47]

Argentine fisheries bring in about a million tons of catch annually,[48] and are centered on Argentine hake, which makes up 50% of the catch; pollock, squid, and centolla crab are also widely harvested. Forestry has long history in every Argentine region, apart from the pampas, accounting for almost 14 million m³ of roundwood harvests.[49] Eucalyptus, pine, and elm (for cellulose) are also grown, mainly for domestic furniture, as well as paper products (1.5 million tons). Fisheries and logging each account for 2% of exports.[48]

 
The Vaca Muerta tight oil (shale oil) field holds 2.58×109 m3 (16.2×10^9 bbl) of oil and 8.7×10^12 m3 (308×10^12 cu ft) of natural gas. It is estimated to be the third largest in the world.[50][51]

Natural resources Edit

Mining and other extractive activities, such as gas and petroleum, are growing industries, increasing from 2% of GDP in 1980 to around 4% today.[48] The northwest and San Juan Province are the main regions of activity. Coal is mined in Santa Cruz Province. Metals and minerals mined include borate, copper, lead, magnesium, sulfur, tungsten, uranium, zinc, silver, titanium, and gold, whose production was boosted after 1997 by the Bajo de la Alumbrera mine in Catamarca Province and Barrick Gold investments a decade later in San Juan. Metal ore exports soared from US$200 million in 1996 to US$1.2 billion in 2004,[52] and to over US$3 billion in 2010.[42]

In mining, in 2019, Argentina was the 4th largest world producer of lithium,[53] the 9th largest world producer of silver,[54] the 17th largest world producer of gold[55] and the 7th largest world producer of boron.[56]

Around 35 million m³ each of petroleum and petroleum fuels are produced, as well as 50 billion m³ of natural gas, making the nation self-sufficient in these staples, and generating around 10% of exports.[48] The most important oil fields lie in Patagonia and Cuyo. A network of pipelines (next to Mexico's, the second-longest in Latin America)[citation needed] send raw product to Bahía Blanca, center of the petrochemical industry, and to the La Plata-Greater Buenos Aires-Rosario industrial belt.

Industry Edit

The World Bank lists the top producing countries each year, based on the total value of production. According to the 2019 list, Argentina has the 31st most valuable industry in the world (57.7 billion dollars), behind Mexico, Brazil and Venezuela, but ahead of Colombia, Peru and Chile.[57]

In 2019, Argentina was the 31st world producer of steel, the 28th producer of vehicles, the 22nd world producer of beer, the 4th world producer of soybean oil and the 3rd world producer of sunflower oil, among other industrial products.[58][59][60][61]

Manufacturing is the largest single sector in the nation's economy (15% of GDP), and is well-integrated into Argentine agriculture, with half the nation's industrial exports being agricultural in nature.[42] Based on food processing and textiles during its early development in the first half of the 20th century, industrial production has become highly diversified in Argentina.[62] Leading sectors by production value are: Food processing and beverages; motor vehicles and auto parts; refinery products, and biodiesel; chemicals and pharmaceuticals; steel and aluminium; and industrial and farm machinery; electronics and home appliances. These latter include over three million big ticket items, as well as an array of electronics, kitchen appliances and cellular phones, among others.[48]

Argentina's auto industry produced 791,000 motor vehicles in 2013, and exported 433,000 (mainly to Brazil, which in turn exported a somewhat larger number to Argentina); Argentina's domestic new auto market reached a record 964,000 in 2013.[63] This marked a peak in vehicle production, by 2021 production had fallen to 434,753 vehicles.[64] Vehicles remain Argentina's top export to Brazil, accounting for $3.1bil in exports in 2021.[65]

Beverages are another significant sector, and Argentina has long been among the top five wine producing countries in the world; beer overtook wine production in 2000, and today leads by nearly two billion liters a year to one.[48] Other manufactured goods include: glass and cement; plastics and tires; lumber products; textiles; tobacco products; recording and print media; furniture; apparel and leather.[48]

Most manufacturing is organized in the 314 industrial parks operating nationwide as of 2012, a fourfold increase over the past decade.[66] Nearly half the industries are based in the Greater Buenos Aires area, although Córdoba, Rosario, and Ushuaia are also significant industrial centers; the latter city became the nation's leading center of electronics production during the 1980s.[67] The production of computers, laptops, and servers grew by 160% in 2011, to nearly 3.4 million units, and covered two-thirds of local demand.[68] Argentina has also become an important manufacturer of cell phones, providing about 80% of all devices sold in the country.[69] Farm machinery, another important rubric historically dominated by imports, was similarly replaced by domestic production, which covered 60% of demand by 2013.[70] Production of cell phones, computers, and similar products is actually an "assembly" industry, with the majority of the higher technology components being imported, and the designs of products originating from foreign countries. High labour costs for Argentina assembly work tend to limit product sales penetration to Latin America, where regional trade treaties exist.[citation needed]

Construction permits nationwide covered over 15 million m2 (160 million ft²) in 2013. The construction sector accounts for over 5% of GDP, and two-thirds of construction is for residential buildings.[71]

Argentine electric output totaled over 133 billion kWh in 2013.[48] This was generated in large part through well developed natural gas and hydroelectric resources. Nuclear energy is also of high importance,[72] and the country is one of the largest producers and exporters, alongside Canada and Russia of cobalt-60, a radioactive isotope widely used in cancer therapy.

Services Edit

The service sector is the largest contributor to total GDP, accounting for over 60%. Argentina enjoys a diversified service sector, which includes well-developed social, corporate, financial, insurance, real estate, transport, communication services, and tourism.

The telecommunications sector has been growing at a fast pace, and the economy benefits from widespread access to communications services. These include: 77% of the population with access to mobile phones,[73] 95% of whom use smartphones;[74] Internet (over 32 million users, or 75% of the population);[75] and broadband services (accounting for nearly all 14 million accounts).[76] Regular telephone services, with 9.5 million lines,[77] and mail services are also robust. Total telecom revenues reached more than $17.8 billion in 2013,[78] and while only one in three retail stores in Argentina accepted online purchases in 2013 E-commerce reached US$4.5 billion in sales.[79]

Trade in services remained in deficit, however, with US$15 billion in service exports in 2013 and US$19 billion in imports.[23] Business Process Outsourcing became the leading Argentine service export, and reached US$3 billion.[80] Advertising revenues from contracts abroad were estimated at over US$1.2 billion.[81]

Tourism is an increasingly important sector and provided 4% of direct economic output (over US$17 billion) in 2012; around 70% of tourism sector activity by value is domestic.[82]

Banking Edit

 
View of Buenos Aires Central Business District from the Costanera Sur Ecological Reserve
 
Protestors outside BankBoston branch during the corralito

Argentine banking, whose deposits exceeded US$120 billion in December 2012,[83] developed around public sector banks, but is now dominated by the private sector. The private sector banks account for most of the 80 active institutions (over 4,000 branches) and holds nearly 60% of deposits and loans, and as many foreign-owned banks as local ones operate in the country.[84] The largest bank in Argentina by far, however, has long been the public Banco de la Nación Argentina. Not to be confused with the Central Bank, this institution now accounts for 30% of total deposits and a fifth of its loan portfolio.[84]

During the 1990s, Argentina's financial system was consolidated and strengthened. Deposits grew from less than US$15 billion in 1991 to over US$80 billion in 2000, while outstanding credit (70% of it to the private sector) tripled to nearly US$100 billion.[85]

The banks largely lent US dollars and took deposits in Argentine pesos, and when the peso lost most of its value in early 2002, many borrowers again found themselves hard pressed to keep up. Delinquencies tripled to about 37%.[85] Over a fifth of deposits had been withdrawn by December 2001, when Economy Minister Domingo Cavallo imposed a near freeze on cash withdrawals. The lifting of the restriction a year later was bittersweet, being greeted calmly, if with some umbrage, at not having these funds freed at their full U.S. dollar value.[86] Some fared worse, as owners of the now-defunct Velox Bank defrauded their clients of up to US$800 million.[87]

Credit in Argentina is still relatively tight. Lending has been increasing 40% a year since 2004, and delinquencies are down to less than 2%.[83] Still, credit outstanding to the private sector is, in real terms, slightly below its 1998 peak,[85] and as a percent of GDP (around 18%)[83] quite low by international standards. The prime rate, which had hovered around 10% in the 1990s, hit 67% in 2002. Although it returned to normal levels quickly, inflation, and more recently, global instability, have been affecting it again. The prime rate was over 20% for much of 2009, and around 17% since the first half of 2010.[83]

Partly a function of this and past instability, Argentines have historically held more deposits overseas than domestically. The estimated US$173 billion in overseas accounts and investment exceeded the domestic monetary base (M3) by nearly US$10 billion in 2012.[23]

Tourism Edit

 
Tour bus in Buenos Aires

According to World Economic Forum's 2017 Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Report, tourism generated over US$22 billion, or 3.9% of GDP, and the industry employed more than 671,000 people, or approximately 3.7% of the total workforce.[88] Tourism from abroad contributed US$5.3 billion, having become the third largest source of foreign exchange in 2004. Around 5.7 million foreign visitors arrived in 2017, reflecting a doubling in visitors since 2002 despite a relative appreciation of the peso.[82]

Argentines, who have long been active travelers within their own country,[89] accounted for over 80%, and international tourism has also seen healthy growth (nearly doubling since 2001).[82] Stagnant for over two decades, domestic travel increased strongly in the last few years,[90] and visitors are flocking to a country seen as affordable, exceptionally diverse, and safe.[91]

Foreign tourism, both to and from Argentina, is increasing as well. INDEC recorded 5.2 million foreign tourist arrivals and 6.7 million departures in 2013; of these, 32% arrived from Brazil, 19% from Europe, 10% from the United States and Canada, 10% from Chile, 24% from the rest of the Western Hemisphere, and 5% from the rest of the world. Around 48% of visitors arrived by commercial flight, 40% by motor travel (mainly from neighboring Brazil), and 12% by sea.[92] Cruise liner arrivals are the fastest growing type of foreign tourism to Argentina; a total of 160 liners carrying 510,000 passengers arrived at the Port of Buenos Aires in 2013, an eightfold increase in a just a decade.[93]

GDP by value added Edit

Supply sector (% of GDP in current prices)[48] 1993–2001 2002–2005 2006–2009[N 1] 2010–2013
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing 5.4 10.3 7.3 7.3
Mining 2.0 5.9 4.8 4.2
Manufacturing 18.5 23.2 19.8 16.8
Public utilities 2.2 1.7 2.3 3.1
Construction 5.5 3.9 6.2 5.6
Commerce and tourism 17.3 14.0 15.6 14.4
Transport and communications 8.3 8.7 7.3 6.7
Financial services 4.2 4.4 3.2 3.4
Real estate and business services 16.5 11.7 13.7 12.9
Public administration and defense 6.3 5.4 5.6 7.4
Health and education 8.4 6.9 8.9 11.9
Personal and other services 5.4 3.9 5.3 6.3
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
  1. ^ New methodology; not strictly comparable to earlier data

Energy Edit

 
A YPF refinery
 
Atucha II Nuclear Power Plant under construction

Electricity generation in Argentina totaled 133.3 billion Kwh in 2013.[48] The electricity sector in Argentina constitutes the third largest power market in Latin America. It mainly still relies on centralised generation by natural gas power generation (51%), hydroelectricity (28%), and oil-fired generation (12%).[94] Resource estimates of unconventional shale gas and tight oil in the Vaca Muerta oil field and elsewhere are estimated to be the world's third-largest.[50] In 2017, Argentina was the 18th largest producer in the world (and the largest producer in Latin America) of natural gas.[95] In 2020, the country was the 28th largest producer of oil in the world, extracting 70,000 m3 (440,300 bbl) per day.[96]

Despite the country's large untapped wind and solar potential new renewable energy technologies and distributed energy generation are barely exploited. Wind energy is the fastest growing among new renewable sources. Fifteen wind farms have been developed since 1994 in Argentina, the only country in the region to produce wind turbines. The 55 MW of installed capacity in these in 2010 will increase by 895 MW upon the completion of new wind farms begun that year.[97] Solar power is being promoted with the goal of expanding installed solar capacity from 6 MW to 300, and total renewable energy capacity from 625 MW to 3,000 MW.[98] At the end of 2021 Argentina was the 21st country in the world in terms of installed hydroelectric power (11.3 GW), the 26th country in the world in terms of installed wind energy (3.2 GW) and the 43rd country in the world in terms of installed solar energy (1.0 GW).[99]

Argentina is in the process of commissioning large centralised energy generation and transmission projects. An important number of these projects are being financed by the government through trust funds, while independent private initiative is limited as it has not fully recovered yet from the effects of the Argentine economic crisis.

The first of the three nuclear reactors was inaugurated in 1974, and in 2015 nuclear power generated 5% of the country's energy output.[94]

The electricity sector was unbundled in generation, transmission and distribution by the reforms carried out in the early 1990s. Generation occurs in a competitive and mostly liberalized market, in which 75% of the generation capacity is owned by private utilities. In contrast, the transmission and distribution sectors are highly regulated and much less competitive than generation.

Infrastructure Edit

 
Railway workers laying track on the Belgrano Railway, following state investment
 
Long-distance passenger train operated by Trenes Argentinos
 
Aeroparque Jorge Newbery in Buenos Aires

Argentina's transport infrastructure is relatively advanced, and at a higher standard than the rest of Latin America.[100] There are over 230,000 km (144,000 mi) of roads (not including private rural roads) of which 72,000 km (45,000 mi) are paved,[101] and 2,800 kilometres (1,700 mi) are expressways, many of which are privatized tollways.[102] Having tripled in length in the last decade, multilane expressways now connect several major cities with more under construction.[102][103] Expressways are, however, currently inadequate to deal with local traffic,[103] as over 12 million motor vehicles were registered nationally as of 2012 (the highest, proportionately, in the region).[104]

The railway network has a total length of 37,856 kilometres (23,523 mi), though at the network's peak this figure was 47,000 km (29,204 mi).[43][105] After decades of declining service and inadequate maintenance, most intercity passenger services shut down in 1992 following the privatization of the country's railways and the breaking up of the state rail company, while thousands of kilometers fell into disuse. Outside Greater Buenos Aires most rail lines still in operation are freight related, carrying around 23 million tons a year.[48][106] The metropolitan rail lines in and around Buenos Aires remained in great demand owing in part to their easy access to the Buenos Aires Underground, and the commuter rail network with its 833 kilometres (518 mi) length carries around 1.4 million passengers daily.[107]

In April 2015, by overwhelming majority the Argentine Senate passed a law which re-created Ferrocarriles Argentinos as Nuevos Ferrocarriles Argentinos, effectively re-nationalising the country's railways.[108][109][110] In the years leading up to this move, the country's railways had seen significant investment from the state, purchasing new rolling stock, re-opening lines closed under privatization and re-nationalising companies such as the Belgrano Cargas freight operator.[111][112][113][114] Some of these re-opened services include the General Roca Railway service to Mar del Plata, the Tren a las Nubes tourist train and the General Mitre Railway service from Buenos Aires to Córdoba.[115][116][117] while brand new services include the Posadas-Encarnación International Train.[118]

Inaugurated in 1913, the Buenos Aires Underground was the first underground rail system built in Latin America, the Spanish speaking world and the Southern Hemisphere.[119] No longer the most extensive in South America, its 60 kilometres (37 mi) of track carry a million passengers daily.[120]

Argentina has around 11,000 km (6,835 mi) of navigable waterways, and these carry more cargo than do the country's freight railways.[121] This includes an extensive network of canals, though Argentina is blessed with ample natural waterways as well, the most significant among these being the Río de la Plata, Paraná, Uruguay, Río Negro, and Paraguay rivers. The Port of Buenos Aires, inaugurated in 1925, is the nation's largest; it handled 11 million tons of freight and transported 1.8 million passengers in 2013.[93]

Aerolíneas Argentinas is the country's main airline, providing both extensive domestic and international service. LADE is a military-run commercial airline that flies extensive domestic services. The nation's 33 airports handled air travel totalling 25.8 million passengers in 2013, of which domestic flights carried over 14.5 million; the nation's two busiest airports, Jorge Newbery and Ministro Pistarini International Airports, boarded around 9 million flights each.[122]

Foreign trade Edit

 
Argentina Export Treemap by Product (2019)

In 2022, Argentina was the 44th largest exporter (by merchandise exports) in the world (US$88 billion), 0.4% of the global total.[123]

Argentine exports are fairly well diversified. However, although agricultural raw materials are over 20% of the total exports, agricultural goods still account for over 50% of exports when processed foods are included. Soy products alone (soybeans, vegetable oil) account for almost one fourth of the total. Cereals, mostly maize and wheat, which were Argentina's leading export during much of the twentieth century, make up less than one tenth now.[124]

Industrial goods today account for over a third of Argentine exports. Motor vehicles and auto parts are the leading industrial export, and over 12% of the total merchandise exports. Chemicals, steel, aluminum, machinery, and plastics account for most of the remaining industrial exports. Trade in manufactures has historically been in deficit for Argentina, however, and despite the nation's overall trade surplus, its manufacturing trade deficit exceeded US$30 billion in 2011.[125] Accordingly, the system of non-automatic import licensing was extended in 2011,[126] and regulations were enacted for the auto sector establishing a model by which a company's future imports would be determined by their exports (though not necessarily in the same rubric).[127]

A net energy importer until 1987, Argentina's fuel exports began increasing rapidly in the early 1990s and today account for about an eighth of the total; refined fuels make up about half of that. Exports of crude petroleum and natural gas have recently been around US$3 billion a year.[124] Rapidly growing domestic energy demand and a gradual decline in oil production, resulted in a US$3 billion energy trade deficit in 2011 (the first in 17 years)[128] and a US$6 billion energy deficit in 2013.[129]

Argentine imports have historically been dominated by the need for industrial and technological supplies, machinery, and parts, which have averaged US$50 billion since 2011 (two-thirds of total imports). Consumer goods including motor vehicles make up most of the rest.[124] Trade in services has historically in deficit for Argentina, and in 2013 this deficit widened to over US$4 billion with a record US$19 billion in service imports.[23] The nation's chronic current account deficit was reversed during the 2002 crisis, and an average current account surplus of US$7 billion was logged between 2002 and 2009; this surplus later narrowed considerably, and has been slightly negative since 2011.[130]

Major Trade Partners Edit

The following table shows the largest trading partners for Argentina in 2022 by total trade value in billions of USD.[131]

Country Total Trade Value Import Value Export Value Balance
  Brazil 28.70 16.03 12.67 -3.36
  China 25.53 17.51 8.02 -9.49
  United States 17.01 10.33 6.68 -3.65
  India 6.40 1.85 4.55 2.70
  Chile 5.71 .778 4.94 4.16
  Vietnamㅤㅤ 4.47 1.24 3.23 1.99
  Netherlands 4.46 .886 3.57 2.68
  Germany 3.60 2.72 .884 -1.83
  Paraguay 3.28 1.96 1.32 -.635
  Spain 2.99 1.26 1.73 .473

Foreign investment Edit

Foreign direct investment in Argentina is divided nearly evenly between manufacturing (36%), natural resources (34%), and services (30%). The chemical and plastics sector (10%) and the automotive sector (6%) lead foreign investment in local manufacturing; oil and gas (22%) and mining (5%), in natural resources; telecommunications (6%), finance (5%), and retail trade (4%), in services.[132] Spain was the leading source of foreign direct investment in Argentina, accounting for US$22 billion (28%) in 2009; the U.S. was the second leading source, with $13 billion (17%);[132] and China grew to become the third-largest source of FDI by 2011.[133] Investments from the Netherlands, Brazil, Chile, and Canada have also been significant; in 2012, foreign nationals held a total of around US$112 billion in direct investment.[23]

Several bilateral agreements play an important role in promoting U.S. private investment. Argentina has an Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) agreement and an active program with the U.S. Export-Import Bank. Under the 1994 U.S.–Argentina Bilateral Investment Treaty, U.S. investors enjoy national treatment in all sectors except shipbuilding, fishing, nuclear-power generation, and uranium production. The treaty allows for international arbitration of investment disputes.

Foreign direct investment (FDI) in Argentina, which averaged US$5.7 billion from 1992 to 1998 and reached in US$24 billion in 1999 (reflecting the purchase of 98% of YPF stock by Repsol), fell during the crisis to US$1.6 billion in 2003.[134] FDI then accelerated, reaching US$8 billion in 2008.[135] The global crisis cut this figure to US$4 billion in 2009; but inflows recovered to US$6.2 billion in 2010.[136] and US$8.7 billion in 2011, with FDI in the first half of 2012 up by a further 42%.[137]

FDI volume remained below the regional average as a percent of GDP even as it recovered, however; Kirchner Administration policies and difficulty in enforcing contractual obligations had been blamed for this modest performance.[138] The nature of foreign investment in Argentina nevertheless shifted significantly after 2000, and whereas over half of FDI during the 1990s consisted in privatizations and mergers and acquisitions, foreign investment in Argentina became the most technologically oriented in the region – with 51% of FDI in the form of medium and high-tech investment (compared to 36% in Brazil and 3% in Chile).[139]

Issues Edit

The economy recovered strongly from the 2001–02 crisis, and was the 21st largest in purchasing power parity terms in 2011; its per capita income on a purchasing power basis was the highest in Latin America.[140] A lobby representing US creditors who refused to accept Argentina's debt-swap programmes has campaigned to have the country expelled from the G20.[141] These holdouts include numerous vulture funds which had rejected the 2005 offer, and had instead resorted to the courts in a bid for higher returns on their defaulted bonds. These disputes had led to a number of liens against central bank accounts in New York and, indirectly, to reduced Argentine access to international credit markets.[142]

The government under President Mauricio Macri announced to be seeking a new loan from the International Monetary Fund in order to avoid another economic crash similar to the one in 2001.[143] The May 2018 announcement comes at a time of high inflation and falling interest rates.[143] The loan would reportedly be worth $30 billion.[144]

Following 25 years of boom and bust stagnation, Argentina's economy doubled in size from 2002 to 2013,[140] and officially, income poverty declined from 54% in 2002 to 5% by 2013;[145] an alternative measurement conducted by CONICET found that income poverty declined instead to 15.4%.[146] Poverty measured by living conditions improved more slowly, however, decreasing from 17.7% in the 2001 Census to 12.5% in the 2010 Census.[147] Argentina's unemployment rate similarly declined from 25% in 2002 to an average of around 7% since 2011 largely because of both growing global demand for Argentine raw materials and strong growth in domestic activity.[148]

Given its ongoing dispute with holdout bondholders, the government has become wary of sending assets to foreign countries (such as the presidential plane, or artworks sent to foreign exhibitions) in case they might be impounded by courts at the behest of holdouts.[149]

The government has been accused of manipulating economic statistics.[150]

Reliability of official CPI estimates Edit

Official CPI inflation figures released monthly by INDEC have been a subject of political controversy since 2007 through 2015.[148][151][152] Official inflation data are disregarded by leading union leaders, even in the people sector, when negotiating pay rises.[153] Some private-sector estimates put inflation for 2010 at around 25%, much higher than the official 10.9% rate for 2010.[153] Inflation estimates from Argentina's provinces are also higher than the government's figures.[153] The government backed up the validity of its data, but has called in the International Monetary Fund to help it design a new nationwide index to replace the current one.[153]

The official government CPI is calculated based on 520 products, however the controversy arises from these products not being specified, and thus how many of those products are subject to price caps and subsidies.[154] Economic analysts have been prosecuted for publishing estimates that disagree with official statistics.[155] The government enforces a fine of up to 500,000 pesos for providing what it calls "fraudulent inflation figures".[153] Beginning in 2015, the government again began to call for competitive bids from the private sector to provide a weekly independent inflation index.[156]

Inflation Edit

 
Argentina Money Supply Increases Year over Year
Dialy data points[157]

High inflation has been a weakness of the Argentine economy for decades.[158] Inflation has been unofficially estimated to be running at around 25% annually since 2008, despite official statistics indicating less than half that figure;[159][160] these would be the highest levels since the 2002 devaluation.[158] A committee was established in 2010 in the Argentine Chamber of Deputies by opposition Deputies Patricia Bullrich, Ricardo Gil Lavedra, and others to publish an alternative index based on private estimates.[161] Food price increases, particularly that of beef, began to outstrip wage increases in 2010, leading Argentines to decrease beef consumption per capita from 69 kg (152 lb) to 57 kg (125 lb) annually and to increase consumption of other meats.[158][162]

Consumer inflation expectations of 28 to 30% led the national mint to buy banknotes of its highest denomination (100 pesos) from Brazil at the end of 2010 to keep up with demand. The central bank pumped at least 1 billion pesos into the economy in this way during 2011.[163]

As of June 2015, the government said that inflation was at 15.3%;[164] approximately half that of some independent estimates.[165] Inflation remained at around 18.6% in 2015 according to an International Monetary Fund estimate;[166] but following a sharp devaluation enacted by the Mauricio Macri administration on 17 December, inflation reignited during the first half of 2016 – reaching 42% according to the Finance Ministry.[167]

Supermarkets in Argentina have adopted electronic price tags, allowing prices to be updated quicker.[168]

In the second quarter of 2019, reports suggested that the economy of the country is sinking, inflation is rising and the currency is depreciating. Despite the country receiving one of the largest IMF financial support programmes ever given to any nation, Argentina's poverty rose to 32% from 26% the previous year.[169][170] In August 2019, as an attempt to stabilise the economy, the government decided to impose restrictions on foreign currency purchases.[171]

The inflation rate in Argentina rose to 52.3 percent in February 2022 from 50.7 percent in the prior month, the steepest increase since September.[172] In August the interest rate was hiked to 69.5% as inflation further deteriorated hitting a 20-year high at 70% driven by many factors among them the 2021–2022 inflation surge and forecasted to top 90% by the end of the year.[173] Inflation hit past 100% in February 2023 for the first time since 1991.[174][175] On October 12, 2023, Argentina's central bank again increased the benchmark interest rate from 118% to 133% since September's inflation report (12.7% monthly and 138% annually) was worse than forecasted.[176]

Argentine workers have protested the inflation holding funerals to mourn the "death of (their) wages" and stating that "inflation destroys savings, impedes planning, and discourages investment."[177]

Income distribution Edit

In relation to other Latin American countries, Argentina has a moderate to low level of income inequality. Its Gini coefficient is of about 0.427 (2014).[178] The social gap is worst in the suburbs of the capital, where beneficiaries of the economic rebound live in gated communities, and many of the poor live in slums known as villas miserias.[179]

In the mid-1970s, the most affluent 10% of Argentina's population had an income 12 times that of the poorest 10%. That figure had grown to 18 times by the mid-1990s, and by 2002, the peak of the crisis, the income of the richest segment of the population was 43 times that of the poorest.[179] These heightened levels of inequality had improved to 26 times by 2006,[180] and to 16 times at the end of 2010.[181] Economic recovery after 2002 was thus accompanied by significant improvement in income distribution: in 2002, the richest 10% absorbed 40% of all income, compared to 1.1% for the poorest 10%;[182] by 2010, the former received 29% of income, and the latter, 1.8%.[181]

Argentina has an inequality-adjusted human development index of 0.729, compared to 0.578 and 0.709 for neighboring Brazil and Chile, respectively.[183] The 2010 Census found that poverty by living conditions still affect 1 in 8 inhabitants, however;[147] and while the official, household survey income poverty rate (based on U$S 100 per person per month, net) was 4.7% in 2013,[145] the National Research Council estimated income poverty in 2010 at 22.6%,[146] with private consulting firms estimating that in 2011 around 21% fell below the income poverty line.[184] The World Bank estimated that, in 2013, 3.6% subsisted on less than US$3.10 per person per day.[185]

See also Edit

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economy, argentina, economy, argentina, second, largest, national, economy, south, america, behind, brazil, argentina, developing, country, with, highly, literate, population, export, oriented, agricultural, sector, diversified, industrial, base, buenos, aires. The economy of Argentina is the second largest national economy in South America behind Brazil Argentina is a developing country with a highly literate population an export oriented agricultural sector and a diversified industrial base Economy of ArgentinaBuenos Aires Central Business DistrictCurrencyArgentine peso ARS Fiscal yearCalendar yearTrade organizationsWTO Mercosur Prosur G 20Country groupDeveloping Emerging 1 Upper middle income economy 2 StatisticsPopulation46 044 703 2022 3 GDP 641 billion nominal 2023 4 1 3 trillion PPP 2023 4 GDP rank23rd nominal 2023 30th PPP 2023 GDP growth5 2 2022 0 2 2023 2 0 2024 4 GDP per capita 13 700 nominal 2023 4 27 300 PPP 2023 4 GDP per capita rank65th nominal 2023 65th PPP 2023 GDP by sectorAgriculture forestry and fishing 6 0 mining 3 6 manufacturing 17 2 construction 5 6 commerce and tourism 16 9 transport communications and utilities 7 9 government 9 5 business social and other services 33 3 2015 5 Inflation CPI 108 8 2023 INDEC 6 Population below poverty line43 1 2022 UCA 7 39 2 2022 INDEC 8 10 6 on less than 6 85 day 2021 9 Gini coefficient42 medium 2021 10 Human Development Index0 842 very high 2021 11 47th 0 720 high IHDI 46th 2021 12 Labor force21 339 080 2022 13 55 1 employment rate 2021 14 Labor force by occupationAgricultural 7 3 manufacturing 13 1 construction 7 6 commerce and tourism 21 4 transport communications and utilities 7 8 financial real estate and business service 9 4 public administration and defense 6 3 social services and other 27 1 2006 15 Unemployment6 3 2022 16 9 8 2019 17 Average gross salaryAR 87 987 monthly June 2023 18 Main industriesFood processing and beveragesmotor vehicles and auto partsappliances and electronicsmachinery and equipmentchemicalspharmaceuticalsglasssteel and aluminumcementtextilestobacco productspublishingfurnitureleatherExternalExports 88 44 billion 2022 19 Export goodsSoybeans and derivatives petroleum and gas vehicles corn wheatMain export partners Brazil 14 32 China 8 97 United States 7 45 Chile 5 58 2022 20 Imports 81 52 billion 2022 21 Import goodsMachinery motor vehicles petroleum and natural gas organic chemicals plasticsMain import partners China 21 46 Brazil 19 59 United States 12 59 Germany 3 34 2022 20 FDI stock 76 58 billion 31 December 2017 est 22 Abroad 40 94 billion 31 December 2017 est 22 Current account 31 32 billion 2017 est 22 Gross external debt 214 9 billion 31 December 2017 est 22 163 2 billion of which public 92 5 billion March 2016 23 Public financesGovernment debt102 of GDP 2021 24 271 5 billion bonds 68 44 8 of GDP December 2021 23 Budget balance 6 of GDP 2017 est 22 Revenues120 6 billion 2017 est 22 142 9 billion 2015 social security 25 9 income and capital gains 23 6 value added sales tax 20 1 trade and duties 15 1 financial tax 6 3 excise and other 9 0 25 Expenses158 6 billion 2017 est 22 167 3 billion 2015 social security 38 8 subsidies and infrastructure 22 5 debt service 9 2 education culture and research 8 8 social assistance 5 4 health 3 4 security 3 1 defense 2 1 other 6 7 25 26 Credit ratingStandard amp Poor s 27 B Domestic SD Foreign B T amp C Assessment Foreign reserves 44 78 billion 30 December 2019 22 Main data source CIA World Fact Book All values unless otherwise stated are in US dollars Argentina benefits from rich natural resources Argentina s economic performance has historically been very uneven with high economic growth alternating with severe recessions particularly since the late twentieth century Income maldistribution and poverty have increased since this period Early in the twentieth century Argentina had one of the ten highest per capita GDP levels globally It was on par with Canada and Australia and had surpassed both France and Italy Argentina s currency declined by about 50 in 2018 to more than 38 Argentine pesos per U S Dollar As of that year it is under a stand by program from the International Monetary Fund In 2019 the currency fell further by 25 In 2020 it fell by 90 in 2021 68 28 and a further 52 in 2022 until July 20 29 Argentina is considered an emerging market by the FTSE Global Equity Index 2018 and one of the G 20 major economies In 2021 MCSI re classified Argentina as a standalone market due to prolonged severe capital controls 30 Contents 1 History 2 Data 3 Sectors 3 1 Agriculture 3 2 Natural resources 3 3 Industry 3 4 Services 3 4 1 Banking 3 4 2 Tourism 3 5 GDP by value added 3 6 Energy 4 Infrastructure 5 Foreign trade 5 1 Major Trade Partners 6 Foreign investment 7 Issues 7 1 Reliability of official CPI estimates 7 2 Inflation 7 3 Income distribution 8 See also 9 References 10 Notes 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory EditMain article Economic history of Argentina This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Before the 1880s Argentina was a relatively isolated backwater dependent on the salted meat wool leather and hide industries for both the more significant part of its foreign exchange and the generation of domestic income and profits The Argentine economy began to experience swift growth after 1880 through the export of livestock and grain raw materials and British and French investment marking the beginning of a fifty year era of significant economic expansion and mass European immigration From 1880 to 1905 this expansion resulted in a 7 5 fold growth in GDP during its most vigorous period averaging about 8 annually One important measure of development GDP per capita rose from 35 of the United States average to about 80 during that period Growth then slowed considerably such that by 1941 Argentina s real per capita GDP was roughly half that of the U S Even so from 1890 to 1950 the country s per capita income was similar to that of Western Europe although income in Argentina remained considerably less evenly distributed According to a study by Baten and Pelger and Twrdek 2009 where the authors compare anthropometric values i e height with real wages Argentina s GDP increased for the decades after 1870 Before 1910 however the heights have been left unaffected This in turn suggests that the increase in the population s welfare did not occur during the income expansion of the given period The Great Depression caused Argentine GDP to fall by a fourth between 1929 and 1932 Having recovered its lost ground by the late 1930s partly through import substitution the economy continued to grow modestly during World War II contrary to the recession caused by the previous world war The war led to reduced availability of imports and higher prices for Argentine exports that combined to create a US 1 6 billion cumulative surplus a third of which was blocked as inconvertible deposits in the Bank of England by the Roca Runciman Treaty Benefiting from innovative self financing and government loans alike value added in manufacturing nevertheless surpassed that of agriculture for the first time in 1943 employed over 1 million by 1947 and allowed the need for imported consumer goods to decline from 40 of the total to 10 by 1950 The populist administration of Juan Peron nationalized the Central Bank railways and other strategic industries and services from 1945 to 1955 The subsequent enactment of developmentalism after 1958 though partial was followed by a good fifteen years Inflation first became a chronic problem during this period it averaged 26 annually from 1944 to 1974 but though it did not become fully developed from 1932 to 1974 Argentina s economy grew almost fivefold or 3 8 in annual terms while its population only doubled While unremarkable this expansion was well distributed and so resulted in several noteworthy changes in Argentine society most notably the development of the largest proportional middle class 40 of the population by the 1960s in Latin America as well as the region s highest paid most unionized working class However the economy declined during the military dictatorship from 1976 to 1983 and for some time afterward The dictatorship s chief economist Jose Alfredo Martinez de Hoz advanced a corrupt anti labor policy of financial liberalization that increased the debt burden and interrupted industrial development and upward social mobility Over 400 000 companies of all sizes went bankrupt by 1982 and neoliberal economic policies prevailing from 1983 through 2001 failed to reverse the situation nbsp Historical development of GDP per capitaRecord foreign debt interest payments tax evasion and capital flight resulted in a balance of payments crisis that plagued Argentina with severe stagflation from 1975 to 1990 including a bout of hyperinflation in 1989 and 1990 Attempting to remedy this situation economist Domingo Cavallo pegged the peso to the U S dollar in 1991 and limited the money supply s growth His team then embarked on a path of trade liberalization deregulation and privatization Inflation dropped to single digits and GDP grew by one third in four years External economic shocks and a dependency on volatile short term capital and debt to maintain the overvalued fixed exchange rate diluted benefits causing erratic economic growth from 1995 and the eventual collapse in 2001 That year and the next the economy suffered its sharpest decline since 1930 by 2002 Argentina had defaulted on its debt Its GDP had declined by nearly 20 in four years unemployment reached 25 and the peso had depreciated 70 after being devalued and floated Argentina s socio economic situation has since been steadily improving Expansionary policies and raw materials exports triggered a rebound in GDP from 2003 onward This trend has been primarily maintained creating over five million jobs and encouraging domestic consumption and fixed investment Social programs were strengthened and a number of important firms privatized during the 1990s were renationalized beginning in 2003 These include the postal service ASA the water utility serving Buenos Aires Pension funds transferred to ANSES Aerolineas Argentinas the energy firm YPF and the railways The economy nearly doubled from 2002 to 2011 growing an average of 7 1 annually and around 9 for five consecutive years between 2003 and 2007 Real wages rose by around 72 from their low point in 2003 to 2013 The global recession did affect the economy in 2009 with growth slowing to nearly zero but high economic growth then resumed and GDP expanded by around 9 in both 2010 and 2011 Foreign exchange controls austerity measures persistent inflation and downturns in Brazil Europe and other important trade partners contributed to slower growth beginning in 2012 however Growth averaged just 1 3 from 2012 to 2014 and rose to 2 4 in 2015 The Argentine government bond market is based on GDP linked bonds and investors both foreign and domestic netted record yields amid renewed growth Argentine debt restructuring offers in 2005 and 2010 resumed payments on the majority of its almost US 100 billion in defaulted bonds and other debt from 2001 nbsp Historical growth of Argentina from 1961 to 2016Holdouts controlling 7 of the bonds including some small investors hedge funds and vulture funds led by Paul Singer s Cayman Islands based NML Capital Limited rejected the 2005 and 2010 offer to exchange their defaulted bonds Singer who demanded US 832 million for Argentine bonds purchased for US 49 million in the secondary market in 2008 attempted to seize Argentine government assets abroad and sued to stop payments from Argentina to the 93 who had accepted the earlier swaps despite the steep discount According to estimates by Morgan Stanley bondholders who instead accepted the 2005 offer of 30 cents on the dollar had by 2012 received returns of about 90 Argentina settled with virtually all holdouts in February 2016 at the cost of US 9 3 billion NML received US 2 4 billion a 392 return on the original value of the bonds While the Argentine Government considers debt leftover from illegitimate governments unconstitutional odious debt it has continued servicing this debt despite the annual cost of around US 14 billion and despite being nearly locked out of international credit markets with annual bond issues since 2002 averaging less than US 2 billion which precludes most debt rollover Nevertheless Argentina has continued to hold successful bond issues as the country s stock market consumer confidence and overall economy continue to grow The country s successful US 16 5 billion bond sale in April 2016 was the largest in emerging market history In May 2018 Argentina s government asked the International Monetary Fund for its intervention with an emergency loan for a 30 billion bailout as reported by Bloomberg In May 2018 the official estimated inflation had peaked up to 25 percent a year and on 4 May Argentina s central bank raised interest rates on pesos to 40 percent from 27 25 percent which is the highest in the world since the national currency had lost 18 of its value since the beginning of the year In 2019 the inflation was considered the highest in 28 years according to the index ascending to 53 8 To the cause of the quarantine in 2020 in April 143 000 SMEs will not be able to pay salaries and fixed expenses for the month even with government assistance so they will have to borrow or increase their capital contribution and approximately 35 000 companies consider closing their business even so the president remains firm in his decision to maintain the state of total quarantine Despite cuts in the payment chain some project 180 total days and calculate 5 of companies that fell in May In 2023 the rate of inflation in Argentina surpassed 100 for the first time since the early 1990s 31 Data Edit nbsp Argentina Inflation Year over Year inflation M2 money supply increases Year over Year Month over Month inflationThe following table shows the main economic indicators in 1980 2021 with IMF staff estimates in 2022 2027 Inflation below 5 is in green 32 Year GDP in Bil US PPP GDP per capita in US PPP GDP in Bil US nominal GDP per capita in US nominal GDP growth real Inflation rate in Percent Unemployment in Percent Government debt in of GDP 1980 172 5 6 172 5 233 7 8 361 2 nbsp 0 7 n a 3 0 n a1981 nbsp 178 0 nbsp 6 256 5 nbsp 189 8 nbsp 6 671 4 nbsp 5 7 n a nbsp 5 0 n a1982 nbsp 183 0 nbsp 6 327 2 nbsp 94 3 nbsp 3 257 9 nbsp 3 1 n a nbsp 4 5 n a1983 nbsp 197 3 nbsp 6 725 1 nbsp 116 3 nbsp 3 962 7 nbsp 3 7 n a nbsp 5 0 n a1984 nbsp 208 5 nbsp 6 988 1 nbsp 130 5 nbsp 4 374 8 nbsp 2 0 n a nbsp 5 0 n a1985 nbsp 200 2 nbsp 6 595 2 nbsp 98 6 nbsp 3 248 7 nbsp 7 0 n a nbsp 6 3 n a1986 nbsp 218 8 nbsp 7 117 3 nbsp 118 6 nbsp 3 857 0 nbsp 7 1 n a nbsp 6 3 n a1987 nbsp 229 9 nbsp 7 393 6 nbsp 121 6 nbsp 3 910 0 nbsp 2 5 n a nbsp 6 0 n a1988 nbsp 233 3 nbsp 7 413 9 nbsp 142 4 nbsp 4 524 5 nbsp 2 0 n a nbsp 6 5 n a1989 nbsp 225 5 nbsp 7 077 1 nbsp 91 4 nbsp 2 867 3 nbsp 7 0 n a nbsp 8 0 n a1990 nbsp 230 8 nbsp 7 094 5 nbsp 158 0 nbsp 4 857 8 nbsp 1 3 n a nbsp 7 6 n a1991 nbsp 263 6 nbsp 7 996 3 nbsp 212 0 nbsp 6 429 5 nbsp 10 5 n a nbsp 6 5 n a1992 nbsp 297 4 nbsp 8 899 4 nbsp 255 8 nbsp 7 653 7 nbsp 10 3 n a nbsp 7 1 25 0 1993 nbsp 323 5 nbsp 9 537 8 nbsp 264 4 nbsp 7 796 2 nbsp 6 3 n a nbsp 11 6 nbsp 26 9 1994 nbsp 349 7 nbsp 10 178 7 nbsp 287 8 nbsp 8 378 7 nbsp 5 8 n a nbsp 13 3 nbsp 28 4 1995 nbsp 346 8 nbsp 9 972 8 nbsp 288 5 nbsp 8 295 1 nbsp 2 8 n a nbsp 18 9 nbsp 30 7 1996 nbsp 372 7 nbsp 10 589 9 nbsp 304 3 nbsp 8 645 5 nbsp 5 5 n a nbsp 18 8 nbsp 32 6 1997 nbsp 409 9 nbsp 11 512 5 nbsp 327 4 nbsp 9 196 5 nbsp 8 1 n a nbsp 16 8 nbsp 31 7 1998 nbsp 430 5 nbsp 11 955 7 nbsp 334 2 nbsp 9 283 2 nbsp 3 9 nbsp 0 9 nbsp 14 8 nbsp 34 1 1999 nbsp 421 8 nbsp 11 587 1 nbsp 317 0 nbsp 8 709 1 nbsp 3 4 nbsp 1 2 nbsp 16 1 nbsp 38 9 2000 nbsp 427 9 nbsp 11 633 0 nbsp 317 8 nbsp 8 638 5 nbsp 0 8 nbsp 0 9 nbsp 17 1 nbsp 40 8 2001 nbsp 418 3 nbsp 11 256 7 nbsp 300 4 nbsp 8 085 4 nbsp 4 4 nbsp 1 1 nbsp 19 2 nbsp 48 0 2002 nbsp 378 5 nbsp 10 089 1 nbsp 112 5 nbsp 2 997 6 nbsp 10 9 nbsp 25 9 nbsp 22 5 nbsp 147 2 2003 nbsp 420 5 nbsp 11 104 7 nbsp 142 4 nbsp 3 761 1 nbsp 9 0 nbsp 13 4 nbsp 17 3 nbsp 125 2 2004 nbsp 470 3 nbsp 12 303 2 nbsp 164 9 nbsp 4 314 1 nbsp 8 9 nbsp 4 4 nbsp 13 6 nbsp 117 9 2005 nbsp 528 0 nbsp 13 681 2 nbsp 199 3 nbsp 5 163 6 nbsp 8 9 nbsp 9 6 nbsp 11 6 nbsp 80 3 2006 nbsp 588 1 nbsp 15 090 3 nbsp 232 9 nbsp 5 976 1 nbsp 8 0 nbsp 10 9 nbsp 10 2 nbsp 70 8 2007 nbsp 658 4 nbsp 16 728 5 nbsp 287 9 nbsp 7 315 7 nbsp 9 0 nbsp 8 8 nbsp 8 5 nbsp 62 1 2008 nbsp 698 2 nbsp 17 567 3 nbsp 363 5 nbsp 9 146 8 nbsp 4 1 nbsp 8 6 nbsp 7 9 nbsp 53 8 2009 nbsp 661 1 nbsp 16 472 3 nbsp 334 6 nbsp 8 337 8 nbsp 5 9 nbsp 6 3 nbsp 8 7 nbsp 55 4 2010 nbsp 736 8 nbsp 18 063 9 nbsp 424 7 nbsp 10 413 0 nbsp 10 1 nbsp 10 5 nbsp 7 8 nbsp 43 5 2011 nbsp 797 3 nbsp 19 322 2 nbsp 527 6 nbsp 12 787 8 nbsp 6 0 nbsp 9 8 nbsp 7 2 nbsp 38 9 2012 nbsp 819 7 nbsp 19 641 4 nbsp 579 7 nbsp 13 889 8 nbsp 1 0 nbsp 10 0 nbsp 7 2 nbsp 40 4 2013 nbsp 849 6 nbsp 20 131 7 nbsp 611 5 nbsp 14 488 8 nbsp 2 4 nbsp 10 6 nbsp 7 1 nbsp 43 5 2014 nbsp 839 9 nbsp 19 683 8 nbsp 563 6 nbsp 13 208 8 nbsp 2 5 n a nbsp 7 3 nbsp 44 7 2015 nbsp 867 2 nbsp 20 105 2 nbsp 642 5 nbsp 14 895 3 nbsp 2 7 n a nbsp 6 5 nbsp 52 6 2016 nbsp 885 2 nbsp 20 307 9 nbsp 556 8 nbsp 12 772 9 nbsp 2 1 n a nbsp 8 5 nbsp 53 1 2017 nbsp 1 039 3 nbsp 23 597 1 nbsp 643 9 nbsp 14 618 3 nbsp 2 8 nbsp 25 7 nbsp 8 4 nbsp 57 0 2018 nbsp 1 036 3 nbsp 23 290 6 nbsp 524 4 nbsp 11 786 4 nbsp 2 6 nbsp 34 3 nbsp 9 2 nbsp 85 2 2019 nbsp 1 033 7 nbsp 23 003 3 nbsp 451 8 nbsp 10 054 0 nbsp 2 0 nbsp 53 5 nbsp 9 8 nbsp 88 8 2020 nbsp 942 2 nbsp 20 758 1 nbsp 389 1 nbsp 8 571 9 nbsp 9 9 nbsp 42 0 nbsp 11 6 nbsp 102 8 2021 nbsp 1 083 4 nbsp 23 632 5 nbsp 486 7 nbsp 10 616 9 nbsp 10 4 nbsp 48 4 nbsp 8 7 nbsp 80 9 2022 nbsp 1 207 2 nbsp 26 073 8 nbsp 630 7 nbsp 13 621 9 nbsp 4 0 nbsp 94 8 nbsp 6 9 nbsp 76 0 2023 nbsp 1 275 5 nbsp 27 276 6 nbsp 643 8 nbsp 13 767 1 nbsp 2 0 nbsp 76 1 nbsp 6 9 nbsp 69 5 2024 nbsp 1 328 6 nbsp 28 130 0 nbsp 642 7 nbsp 13 607 5 nbsp 2 0 nbsp 51 2 nbsp 6 9 nbsp 69 6 2025 nbsp 1 380 4 nbsp 28 936 6 nbsp 625 7 nbsp 13 116 4 nbsp 2 0 nbsp 40 8 nbsp 6 9 nbsp 70 0 2026 nbsp 1 434 8 nbsp 29 779 5 nbsp 633 3 nbsp 13 144 0 nbsp 2 0 nbsp 37 1 nbsp 6 9 nbsp 67 1 2027 nbsp 1 491 8 nbsp 30 656 3 nbsp 662 4 nbsp 13 612 5 nbsp 2 0 nbsp 32 2 nbsp 6 9 nbsp 63 8 Sectors EditAgriculture Edit Main article Agriculture in Argentina nbsp Soy field in Argentina s fertile Pampas The versatile legume makes up about half the nation s crop production nbsp Vineyard in Mendoza Province The country is the fifth largest producer in the world 33 Argentina is one of the world s major agricultural producers ranking among the top producers in most of the following exporters of beef citrus fruit grapes honey maize sorghum soybeans squash sunflower seeds wheat and yerba mate 34 Agriculture accounted for 9 of GDP in 2010 and around one fifth of all exports not including processed food and feed which are another third Commercial harvests reached 103 million tons in 2010 of which over 54 million were oilseeds mainly soy and sunflower and over 46 million were cereals mainly maize wheat and sorghum 35 Argentina is the largest producer in the world of yerba mate one of the 5 largest producers in the world of soy maize sunflower seed lemon and pear one of the 10 largest producers in the world of barley grape artichoke tobacco and cotton and one of the 15 largest producers in the world of wheat sugarcane sorghum and grapefruit 36 In 2018 Argentina was the 3rd largest producer of soy in the world with 37 7 million tons produced behind only the US and Brazil the 4th largest producer of maize in the world with 43 5 million tons produced behind only the US China and Brazil the 12th largest producer of wheat in the world with 18 5 million tons produced the 11th largest producer in the world of sorghum with 1 5 million tons produced the 10th largest producer of grape in the world with 1 9 million tons produced besides having produced 19 million tons of sugarcane mainly in the province of Tucuman 37 Argentina produces near 2 million tons of sugar with the produced cane In the same year Argentina produced 4 1 million tons of barley being one of the 20 largest producers in the world of this cereal 38 The country is also one of the world s largest producers of sunflower seed in 2010 it was the 3rd largest producer in the world with 2 2 million tons 39 In 2018 Argentina also produced 2 3 million tons of potato almost 2 million tons of lemon 1 3 million tons of rice 1 million tons of orange 921 thousand tons of peanut 813 thousand tons of cotton 707 thousand tons of onion 656 thousand tons of tomato 565 thousand tons of pear 510 thousand tons of apple 491 thousand tons of oats 473 thousand tons of beans 431 thousand tons of tangerine 302 thousand tons of yerba mate 283 thousand tons of carrot 226 thousand tons of peach 194 thousand tons of cassava 174 thousand tons of olives 174 thousand tons of banana 148 thousand tons of garlic 114 thousand tons of grapefruit 110 thousand tons of artichoke in addition to smaller productions of other agricultural products 40 In livestock Argentina was in 2019 the 4th world producer of beef with a production of 3 million tons only behind USA Brazil and China the 4th world producer of honey the 10th world producer of wool the world s 13th largest producer of chicken meat the world s 23rd largest producer of pork the 18th largest producer of cow s milk and the world s 14th largest producer of chicken egg 41 Soy and its byproducts mainly animal feed and vegetable oils are major export raw materials with one fourth of the total cereals added another 10 Cattle raising is also a major industry though mostly for domestic consumption beef leather and dairy were 5 of total exports 42 Sheep raising and wool are important in Patagonia though these activities have declined by half since 1990 Biodiesel however has become one of the fastest growing agro industrial activities with over US 2 billion in exports in 2011 42 Fruits and vegetables made up 4 of exports apples and pears in the Rio Negro valley rice oranges and other citrus in the northwest and Mesopotamia grapes and strawberries in Cuyo the west and berries in the far south Cotton and tobacco are major crops in the Gran Chaco sugarcane and chile peppers in the northwest and olives and garlic in the west Yerba mate tea Misiones tomatoes Salta and peaches Mendoza are grown for domestic consumption Organic farming is growing in Argentina and the nearly 3 million hectares 7 5 million acres of organic cultivation is second only to Australia 43 Argentina is the world s fifth largest wine producer 44 and fine wine production has taken major leaps in quality A growing export total viticulture potential is far from having been met Mendoza is the largest wine region followed by San Juan 45 Government policy towards the lucrative agrarian sector is a subject of at times contentious debate in Argentina A grain embargo by farmers protesting an increase in export taxes for their products began in March 2008 46 and following a series of failed negotiations strikes and lockouts largely subsided only with the 16 July defeat of the export tax hike in the Senate 47 Argentine fisheries bring in about a million tons of catch annually 48 and are centered on Argentine hake which makes up 50 of the catch pollock squid and centolla crab are also widely harvested Forestry has long history in every Argentine region apart from the pampas accounting for almost 14 million m of roundwood harvests 49 Eucalyptus pine and elm for cellulose are also grown mainly for domestic furniture as well as paper products 1 5 million tons Fisheries and logging each account for 2 of exports 48 nbsp The Vaca Muerta tight oil shale oil field holds 2 58 109 m3 16 2 10 9 bbl of oil and 8 7 10 12 m3 308 10 12 cu ft of natural gas It is estimated to be the third largest in the world 50 51 Natural resources Edit See also Mining in Argentina Mining and other extractive activities such as gas and petroleum are growing industries increasing from 2 of GDP in 1980 to around 4 today 48 The northwest and San Juan Province are the main regions of activity Coal is mined in Santa Cruz Province Metals and minerals mined include borate copper lead magnesium sulfur tungsten uranium zinc silver titanium and gold whose production was boosted after 1997 by the Bajo de la Alumbrera mine in Catamarca Province and Barrick Gold investments a decade later in San Juan Metal ore exports soared from US 200 million in 1996 to US 1 2 billion in 2004 52 and to over US 3 billion in 2010 42 In mining in 2019 Argentina was the 4th largest world producer of lithium 53 the 9th largest world producer of silver 54 the 17th largest world producer of gold 55 and the 7th largest world producer of boron 56 Around 35 million m each of petroleum and petroleum fuels are produced as well as 50 billion m of natural gas making the nation self sufficient in these staples and generating around 10 of exports 48 The most important oil fields lie in Patagonia and Cuyo A network of pipelines next to Mexico s the second longest in Latin America citation needed send raw product to Bahia Blanca center of the petrochemical industry and to the La Plata Greater Buenos Aires Rosario industrial belt Industry Edit The World Bank lists the top producing countries each year based on the total value of production According to the 2019 list Argentina has the 31st most valuable industry in the world 57 7 billion dollars behind Mexico Brazil and Venezuela but ahead of Colombia Peru and Chile 57 In 2019 Argentina was the 31st world producer of steel the 28th producer of vehicles the 22nd world producer of beer the 4th world producer of soybean oil and the 3rd world producer of sunflower oil among other industrial products 58 59 60 61 Manufacturing is the largest single sector in the nation s economy 15 of GDP and is well integrated into Argentine agriculture with half the nation s industrial exports being agricultural in nature 42 Based on food processing and textiles during its early development in the first half of the 20th century industrial production has become highly diversified in Argentina 62 Leading sectors by production value are Food processing and beverages motor vehicles and auto parts refinery products and biodiesel chemicals and pharmaceuticals steel and aluminium and industrial and farm machinery electronics and home appliances These latter include over three million big ticket items as well as an array of electronics kitchen appliances and cellular phones among others 48 Argentina s auto industry produced 791 000 motor vehicles in 2013 and exported 433 000 mainly to Brazil which in turn exported a somewhat larger number to Argentina Argentina s domestic new auto market reached a record 964 000 in 2013 63 This marked a peak in vehicle production by 2021 production had fallen to 434 753 vehicles 64 Vehicles remain Argentina s top export to Brazil accounting for 3 1bil in exports in 2021 65 Beverages are another significant sector and Argentina has long been among the top five wine producing countries in the world beer overtook wine production in 2000 and today leads by nearly two billion liters a year to one 48 Other manufactured goods include glass and cement plastics and tires lumber products textiles tobacco products recording and print media furniture apparel and leather 48 Most manufacturing is organized in the 314 industrial parks operating nationwide as of 2012 a fourfold increase over the past decade 66 Nearly half the industries are based in the Greater Buenos Aires area although Cordoba Rosario and Ushuaia are also significant industrial centers the latter city became the nation s leading center of electronics production during the 1980s 67 The production of computers laptops and servers grew by 160 in 2011 to nearly 3 4 million units and covered two thirds of local demand 68 Argentina has also become an important manufacturer of cell phones providing about 80 of all devices sold in the country 69 Farm machinery another important rubric historically dominated by imports was similarly replaced by domestic production which covered 60 of demand by 2013 70 Production of cell phones computers and similar products is actually an assembly industry with the majority of the higher technology components being imported and the designs of products originating from foreign countries High labour costs for Argentina assembly work tend to limit product sales penetration to Latin America where regional trade treaties exist citation needed Construction permits nationwide covered over 15 million m2 160 million ft in 2013 The construction sector accounts for over 5 of GDP and two thirds of construction is for residential buildings 71 Argentine electric output totaled over 133 billion kWh in 2013 48 This was generated in large part through well developed natural gas and hydroelectric resources Nuclear energy is also of high importance 72 and the country is one of the largest producers and exporters alongside Canada and Russia of cobalt 60 a radioactive isotope widely used in cancer therapy Services Edit The service sector is the largest contributor to total GDP accounting for over 60 Argentina enjoys a diversified service sector which includes well developed social corporate financial insurance real estate transport communication services and tourism The telecommunications sector has been growing at a fast pace and the economy benefits from widespread access to communications services These include 77 of the population with access to mobile phones 73 95 of whom use smartphones 74 Internet over 32 million users or 75 of the population 75 and broadband services accounting for nearly all 14 million accounts 76 Regular telephone services with 9 5 million lines 77 and mail services are also robust Total telecom revenues reached more than 17 8 billion in 2013 78 and while only one in three retail stores in Argentina accepted online purchases in 2013 E commerce reached US 4 5 billion in sales 79 Trade in services remained in deficit however with US 15 billion in service exports in 2013 and US 19 billion in imports 23 Business Process Outsourcing became the leading Argentine service export and reached US 3 billion 80 Advertising revenues from contracts abroad were estimated at over US 1 2 billion 81 Tourism is an increasingly important sector and provided 4 of direct economic output over US 17 billion in 2012 around 70 of tourism sector activity by value is domestic 82 Banking Edit nbsp View of Buenos Aires Central Business District from the Costanera Sur Ecological Reserve nbsp Protestors outside BankBoston branch during the corralitoMain article Banking in Argentina Argentine banking whose deposits exceeded US 120 billion in December 2012 83 developed around public sector banks but is now dominated by the private sector The private sector banks account for most of the 80 active institutions over 4 000 branches and holds nearly 60 of deposits and loans and as many foreign owned banks as local ones operate in the country 84 The largest bank in Argentina by far however has long been the public Banco de la Nacion Argentina Not to be confused with the Central Bank this institution now accounts for 30 of total deposits and a fifth of its loan portfolio 84 During the 1990s Argentina s financial system was consolidated and strengthened Deposits grew from less than US 15 billion in 1991 to over US 80 billion in 2000 while outstanding credit 70 of it to the private sector tripled to nearly US 100 billion 85 The banks largely lent US dollars and took deposits in Argentine pesos and when the peso lost most of its value in early 2002 many borrowers again found themselves hard pressed to keep up Delinquencies tripled to about 37 85 Over a fifth of deposits had been withdrawn by December 2001 when Economy Minister Domingo Cavallo imposed a near freeze on cash withdrawals The lifting of the restriction a year later was bittersweet being greeted calmly if with some umbrage at not having these funds freed at their full U S dollar value 86 Some fared worse as owners of the now defunct Velox Bank defrauded their clients of up to US 800 million 87 Credit in Argentina is still relatively tight Lending has been increasing 40 a year since 2004 and delinquencies are down to less than 2 83 Still credit outstanding to the private sector is in real terms slightly below its 1998 peak 85 and as a percent of GDP around 18 83 quite low by international standards The prime rate which had hovered around 10 in the 1990s hit 67 in 2002 Although it returned to normal levels quickly inflation and more recently global instability have been affecting it again The prime rate was over 20 for much of 2009 and around 17 since the first half of 2010 83 Partly a function of this and past instability Argentines have historically held more deposits overseas than domestically The estimated US 173 billion in overseas accounts and investment exceeded the domestic monetary base M3 by nearly US 10 billion in 2012 23 Tourism Edit Main article Tourism in Argentina nbsp Tour bus in Buenos AiresAccording to World Economic Forum s 2017 Travel amp Tourism Competitiveness Report tourism generated over US 22 billion or 3 9 of GDP and the industry employed more than 671 000 people or approximately 3 7 of the total workforce 88 Tourism from abroad contributed US 5 3 billion having become the third largest source of foreign exchange in 2004 Around 5 7 million foreign visitors arrived in 2017 reflecting a doubling in visitors since 2002 despite a relative appreciation of the peso 82 Argentines who have long been active travelers within their own country 89 accounted for over 80 and international tourism has also seen healthy growth nearly doubling since 2001 82 Stagnant for over two decades domestic travel increased strongly in the last few years 90 and visitors are flocking to a country seen as affordable exceptionally diverse and safe 91 Foreign tourism both to and from Argentina is increasing as well INDEC recorded 5 2 million foreign tourist arrivals and 6 7 million departures in 2013 of these 32 arrived from Brazil 19 from Europe 10 from the United States and Canada 10 from Chile 24 from the rest of the Western Hemisphere and 5 from the rest of the world Around 48 of visitors arrived by commercial flight 40 by motor travel mainly from neighboring Brazil and 12 by sea 92 Cruise liner arrivals are the fastest growing type of foreign tourism to Argentina a total of 160 liners carrying 510 000 passengers arrived at the Port of Buenos Aires in 2013 an eightfold increase in a just a decade 93 GDP by value added Edit Supply sector of GDP in current prices 48 1993 2001 2002 2005 2006 2009 N 1 2010 2013Agriculture forestry and fishing 5 4 10 3 7 3 7 3Mining 2 0 5 9 4 8 4 2Manufacturing 18 5 23 2 19 8 16 8Public utilities 2 2 1 7 2 3 3 1Construction 5 5 3 9 6 2 5 6Commerce and tourism 17 3 14 0 15 6 14 4Transport and communications 8 3 8 7 7 3 6 7Financial services 4 2 4 4 3 2 3 4Real estate and business services 16 5 11 7 13 7 12 9Public administration and defense 6 3 5 4 5 6 7 4Health and education 8 4 6 9 8 9 11 9Personal and other services 5 4 3 9 5 3 6 3Total 100 0 100 0 100 0 100 0 New methodology not strictly comparable to earlier data Energy Edit Main article Energy in Argentina nbsp A YPF refinery nbsp Atucha II Nuclear Power Plant under constructionElectricity generation in Argentina totaled 133 3 billion Kwh in 2013 48 The electricity sector in Argentina constitutes the third largest power market in Latin America It mainly still relies on centralised generation by natural gas power generation 51 hydroelectricity 28 and oil fired generation 12 94 Resource estimates of unconventional shale gas and tight oil in the Vaca Muerta oil field and elsewhere are estimated to be the world s third largest 50 In 2017 Argentina was the 18th largest producer in the world and the largest producer in Latin America of natural gas 95 In 2020 the country was the 28th largest producer of oil in the world extracting 70 000 m3 440 300 bbl per day 96 Despite the country s large untapped wind and solar potential new renewable energy technologies and distributed energy generation are barely exploited Wind energy is the fastest growing among new renewable sources Fifteen wind farms have been developed since 1994 in Argentina the only country in the region to produce wind turbines The 55 MW of installed capacity in these in 2010 will increase by 895 MW upon the completion of new wind farms begun that year 97 Solar power is being promoted with the goal of expanding installed solar capacity from 6 MW to 300 and total renewable energy capacity from 625 MW to 3 000 MW 98 At the end of 2021 Argentina was the 21st country in the world in terms of installed hydroelectric power 11 3 GW the 26th country in the world in terms of installed wind energy 3 2 GW and the 43rd country in the world in terms of installed solar energy 1 0 GW 99 Argentina is in the process of commissioning large centralised energy generation and transmission projects An important number of these projects are being financed by the government through trust funds while independent private initiative is limited as it has not fully recovered yet from the effects of the Argentine economic crisis The first of the three nuclear reactors was inaugurated in 1974 and in 2015 nuclear power generated 5 of the country s energy output 94 The electricity sector was unbundled in generation transmission and distribution by the reforms carried out in the early 1990s Generation occurs in a competitive and mostly liberalized market in which 75 of the generation capacity is owned by private utilities In contrast the transmission and distribution sectors are highly regulated and much less competitive than generation Infrastructure EditMain article Transportation in Argentina nbsp Railway workers laying track on the Belgrano Railway following state investment nbsp Long distance passenger train operated by Trenes Argentinos nbsp Aeroparque Jorge Newbery in Buenos AiresArgentina s transport infrastructure is relatively advanced and at a higher standard than the rest of Latin America 100 There are over 230 000 km 144 000 mi of roads not including private rural roads of which 72 000 km 45 000 mi are paved 101 and 2 800 kilometres 1 700 mi are expressways many of which are privatized tollways 102 Having tripled in length in the last decade multilane expressways now connect several major cities with more under construction 102 103 Expressways are however currently inadequate to deal with local traffic 103 as over 12 million motor vehicles were registered nationally as of 2012 the highest proportionately in the region 104 The railway network has a total length of 37 856 kilometres 23 523 mi though at the network s peak this figure was 47 000 km 29 204 mi 43 105 After decades of declining service and inadequate maintenance most intercity passenger services shut down in 1992 following the privatization of the country s railways and the breaking up of the state rail company while thousands of kilometers fell into disuse Outside Greater Buenos Aires most rail lines still in operation are freight related carrying around 23 million tons a year 48 106 The metropolitan rail lines in and around Buenos Aires remained in great demand owing in part to their easy access to the Buenos Aires Underground and the commuter rail network with its 833 kilometres 518 mi length carries around 1 4 million passengers daily 107 In April 2015 by overwhelming majority the Argentine Senate passed a law which re created Ferrocarriles Argentinos as Nuevos Ferrocarriles Argentinos effectively re nationalising the country s railways 108 109 110 In the years leading up to this move the country s railways had seen significant investment from the state purchasing new rolling stock re opening lines closed under privatization and re nationalising companies such as the Belgrano Cargas freight operator 111 112 113 114 Some of these re opened services include the General Roca Railway service to Mar del Plata the Tren a las Nubes tourist train and the General Mitre Railway service from Buenos Aires to Cordoba 115 116 117 while brand new services include the Posadas Encarnacion International Train 118 Inaugurated in 1913 the Buenos Aires Underground was the first underground rail system built in Latin America the Spanish speaking world and the Southern Hemisphere 119 No longer the most extensive in South America its 60 kilometres 37 mi of track carry a million passengers daily 120 Argentina has around 11 000 km 6 835 mi of navigable waterways and these carry more cargo than do the country s freight railways 121 This includes an extensive network of canals though Argentina is blessed with ample natural waterways as well the most significant among these being the Rio de la Plata Parana Uruguay Rio Negro and Paraguay rivers The Port of Buenos Aires inaugurated in 1925 is the nation s largest it handled 11 million tons of freight and transported 1 8 million passengers in 2013 93 Aerolineas Argentinas is the country s main airline providing both extensive domestic and international service LADE is a military run commercial airline that flies extensive domestic services The nation s 33 airports handled air travel totalling 25 8 million passengers in 2013 of which domestic flights carried over 14 5 million the nation s two busiest airports Jorge Newbery and Ministro Pistarini International Airports boarded around 9 million flights each 122 Foreign trade Edit nbsp Argentina Export Treemap by Product 2019 Main article Foreign trade of Argentina In 2022 Argentina was the 44th largest exporter by merchandise exports in the world US 88 billion 0 4 of the global total 123 Argentine exports are fairly well diversified However although agricultural raw materials are over 20 of the total exports agricultural goods still account for over 50 of exports when processed foods are included Soy products alone soybeans vegetable oil account for almost one fourth of the total Cereals mostly maize and wheat which were Argentina s leading export during much of the twentieth century make up less than one tenth now 124 Industrial goods today account for over a third of Argentine exports Motor vehicles and auto parts are the leading industrial export and over 12 of the total merchandise exports Chemicals steel aluminum machinery and plastics account for most of the remaining industrial exports Trade in manufactures has historically been in deficit for Argentina however and despite the nation s overall trade surplus its manufacturing trade deficit exceeded US 30 billion in 2011 125 Accordingly the system of non automatic import licensing was extended in 2011 126 and regulations were enacted for the auto sector establishing a model by which a company s future imports would be determined by their exports though not necessarily in the same rubric 127 A net energy importer until 1987 Argentina s fuel exports began increasing rapidly in the early 1990s and today account for about an eighth of the total refined fuels make up about half of that Exports of crude petroleum and natural gas have recently been around US 3 billion a year 124 Rapidly growing domestic energy demand and a gradual decline in oil production resulted in a US 3 billion energy trade deficit in 2011 the first in 17 years 128 and a US 6 billion energy deficit in 2013 129 Argentine imports have historically been dominated by the need for industrial and technological supplies machinery and parts which have averaged US 50 billion since 2011 two thirds of total imports Consumer goods including motor vehicles make up most of the rest 124 Trade in services has historically in deficit for Argentina and in 2013 this deficit widened to over US 4 billion with a record US 19 billion in service imports 23 The nation s chronic current account deficit was reversed during the 2002 crisis and an average current account surplus of US 7 billion was logged between 2002 and 2009 this surplus later narrowed considerably and has been slightly negative since 2011 130 Major Trade Partners Edit The following table shows the largest trading partners for Argentina in 2022 by total trade value in billions of USD 131 Country Total Trade Value Import Value Export Value Balance nbsp Brazil 28 70 16 03 12 67 3 36 nbsp China 25 53 17 51 8 02 9 49 nbsp United States 17 01 10 33 6 68 3 65 nbsp India 6 40 1 85 4 55 2 70 nbsp Chile 5 71 778 4 94 4 16 nbsp Vietnamㅤㅤ 4 47 1 24 3 23 1 99 nbsp Netherlands 4 46 886 3 57 2 68 nbsp Germany 3 60 2 72 884 1 83 nbsp Paraguay 3 28 1 96 1 32 635 nbsp Spain 2 99 1 26 1 73 473Foreign investment EditForeign direct investment in Argentina is divided nearly evenly between manufacturing 36 natural resources 34 and services 30 The chemical and plastics sector 10 and the automotive sector 6 lead foreign investment in local manufacturing oil and gas 22 and mining 5 in natural resources telecommunications 6 finance 5 and retail trade 4 in services 132 Spain was the leading source of foreign direct investment in Argentina accounting for US 22 billion 28 in 2009 the U S was the second leading source with 13 billion 17 132 and China grew to become the third largest source of FDI by 2011 133 Investments from the Netherlands Brazil Chile and Canada have also been significant in 2012 foreign nationals held a total of around US 112 billion in direct investment 23 Several bilateral agreements play an important role in promoting U S private investment Argentina has an Overseas Private Investment Corporation OPIC agreement and an active program with the U S Export Import Bank Under the 1994 U S Argentina Bilateral Investment Treaty U S investors enjoy national treatment in all sectors except shipbuilding fishing nuclear power generation and uranium production The treaty allows for international arbitration of investment disputes Foreign direct investment FDI in Argentina which averaged US 5 7 billion from 1992 to 1998 and reached in US 24 billion in 1999 reflecting the purchase of 98 of YPF stock by Repsol fell during the crisis to US 1 6 billion in 2003 134 FDI then accelerated reaching US 8 billion in 2008 135 The global crisis cut this figure to US 4 billion in 2009 but inflows recovered to US 6 2 billion in 2010 136 and US 8 7 billion in 2011 with FDI in the first half of 2012 up by a further 42 137 FDI volume remained below the regional average as a percent of GDP even as it recovered however Kirchner Administration policies and difficulty in enforcing contractual obligations had been blamed for this modest performance 138 The nature of foreign investment in Argentina nevertheless shifted significantly after 2000 and whereas over half of FDI during the 1990s consisted in privatizations and mergers and acquisitions foreign investment in Argentina became the most technologically oriented in the region with 51 of FDI in the form of medium and high tech investment compared to 36 in Brazil and 3 in Chile 139 Issues EditThe economy recovered strongly from the 2001 02 crisis and was the 21st largest in purchasing power parity terms in 2011 its per capita income on a purchasing power basis was the highest in Latin America 140 A lobby representing US creditors who refused to accept Argentina s debt swap programmes has campaigned to have the country expelled from the G20 141 These holdouts include numerous vulture funds which had rejected the 2005 offer and had instead resorted to the courts in a bid for higher returns on their defaulted bonds These disputes had led to a number of liens against central bank accounts in New York and indirectly to reduced Argentine access to international credit markets 142 The government under President Mauricio Macri announced to be seeking a new loan from the International Monetary Fund in order to avoid another economic crash similar to the one in 2001 143 The May 2018 announcement comes at a time of high inflation and falling interest rates 143 The loan would reportedly be worth 30 billion 144 Following 25 years of boom and bust stagnation Argentina s economy doubled in size from 2002 to 2013 140 and officially income poverty declined from 54 in 2002 to 5 by 2013 145 an alternative measurement conducted by CONICET found that income poverty declined instead to 15 4 146 Poverty measured by living conditions improved more slowly however decreasing from 17 7 in the 2001 Census to 12 5 in the 2010 Census 147 Argentina s unemployment rate similarly declined from 25 in 2002 to an average of around 7 since 2011 largely because of both growing global demand for Argentine raw materials and strong growth in domestic activity 148 Given its ongoing dispute with holdout bondholders the government has become wary of sending assets to foreign countries such as the presidential plane or artworks sent to foreign exhibitions in case they might be impounded by courts at the behest of holdouts 149 The government has been accused of manipulating economic statistics 150 Reliability of official CPI estimates Edit Official CPI inflation figures released monthly by INDEC have been a subject of political controversy since 2007 through 2015 148 151 152 Official inflation data are disregarded by leading union leaders even in the people sector when negotiating pay rises 153 Some private sector estimates put inflation for 2010 at around 25 much higher than the official 10 9 rate for 2010 153 Inflation estimates from Argentina s provinces are also higher than the government s figures 153 The government backed up the validity of its data but has called in the International Monetary Fund to help it design a new nationwide index to replace the current one 153 The official government CPI is calculated based on 520 products however the controversy arises from these products not being specified and thus how many of those products are subject to price caps and subsidies 154 Economic analysts have been prosecuted for publishing estimates that disagree with official statistics 155 The government enforces a fine of up to 500 000 pesos for providing what it calls fraudulent inflation figures 153 Beginning in 2015 the government again began to call for competitive bids from the private sector to provide a weekly independent inflation index 156 Inflation Edit nbsp Argentina Money Supply Increases Year over Year Dialy data points 157 High inflation has been a weakness of the Argentine economy for decades 158 Inflation has been unofficially estimated to be running at around 25 annually since 2008 despite official statistics indicating less than half that figure 159 160 these would be the highest levels since the 2002 devaluation 158 A committee was established in 2010 in the Argentine Chamber of Deputies by opposition Deputies Patricia Bullrich Ricardo Gil Lavedra and others to publish an alternative index based on private estimates 161 Food price increases particularly that of beef began to outstrip wage increases in 2010 leading Argentines to decrease beef consumption per capita from 69 kg 152 lb to 57 kg 125 lb annually and to increase consumption of other meats 158 162 Consumer inflation expectations of 28 to 30 led the national mint to buy banknotes of its highest denomination 100 pesos from Brazil at the end of 2010 to keep up with demand The central bank pumped at least 1 billion pesos into the economy in this way during 2011 163 As of June 2015 update the government said that inflation was at 15 3 164 approximately half that of some independent estimates 165 Inflation remained at around 18 6 in 2015 according to an International Monetary Fund estimate 166 but following a sharp devaluation enacted by the Mauricio Macri administration on 17 December inflation reignited during the first half of 2016 reaching 42 according to the Finance Ministry 167 Supermarkets in Argentina have adopted electronic price tags allowing prices to be updated quicker 168 In the second quarter of 2019 reports suggested that the economy of the country is sinking inflation is rising and the currency is depreciating Despite the country receiving one of the largest IMF financial support programmes ever given to any nation Argentina s poverty rose to 32 from 26 the previous year 169 170 In August 2019 as an attempt to stabilise the economy the government decided to impose restrictions on foreign currency purchases 171 The inflation rate in Argentina rose to 52 3 percent in February 2022 from 50 7 percent in the prior month the steepest increase since September 172 In August the interest rate was hiked to 69 5 as inflation further deteriorated hitting a 20 year high at 70 driven by many factors among them the 2021 2022 inflation surge and forecasted to top 90 by the end of the year 173 Inflation hit past 100 in February 2023 for the first time since 1991 174 175 On October 12 2023 Argentina s central bank again increased the benchmark interest rate from 118 to 133 since September s inflation report 12 7 monthly and 138 annually was worse than forecasted 176 Argentine workers have protested the inflation holding funerals to mourn the death of their wages and stating that inflation destroys savings impedes planning and discourages investment 177 Income distribution Edit In relation to other Latin American countries Argentina has a moderate to low level of income inequality Its Gini coefficient is of about 0 427 2014 178 The social gap is worst in the suburbs of the capital where beneficiaries of the economic rebound live in gated communities and many of the poor live in slums known as villas miserias 179 In the mid 1970s the most affluent 10 of Argentina s population had an income 12 times that of the poorest 10 That figure had grown to 18 times by the mid 1990s and by 2002 the peak of the crisis the income of the richest segment of the population was 43 times that of the poorest 179 These heightened levels of inequality had improved to 26 times by 2006 180 and to 16 times at the end of 2010 181 Economic recovery after 2002 was thus accompanied by significant improvement in income distribution in 2002 the richest 10 absorbed 40 of all income compared to 1 1 for the poorest 10 182 by 2010 the former received 29 of income and the latter 1 8 181 Argentina has an inequality adjusted human development index of 0 729 compared to 0 578 and 0 709 for neighboring Brazil and Chile respectively 183 The 2010 Census found that poverty by living conditions still affect 1 in 8 inhabitants however 147 and while the official household survey income poverty rate based on U S 100 per person per month net was 4 7 in 2013 145 the National Research Council estimated income poverty in 2010 at 22 6 146 with private consulting firms estimating that in 2011 around 21 fell below the income poverty line 184 The World Bank estimated that in 2013 3 6 subsisted on less than US 3 10 per person per day 185 See also Edit nbsp Argentina portalList of Latin American and Caribbean countries by GDP growth List of Latin American and Caribbean countries by GDP nominal List of Latin American and Caribbean countries by GDP PPP Argentina and the World Bank Economic history of ArgentinaReferences Edit World Economic Outlook Database April 2019 IMF org International Monetary Fund Retrieved 29 September 2019 World Bank Country and Lending Groups World Bank Retrieved 29 September 2019 Nuevos datos provisorios del Censo 2022 Argentina tiene 46 044 703 habitantes Infobae 31 January 2023 Retrieved 1 February 2023 a b c d e World Economic Outlook database April 2023 imf org International Monetary Fund Indec PDF in Spanish Indec Archived from the original PDF on 24 September 2016 Retrieved 23 September 2016 Indice de precios al consumidor PDF Instituto Nacional de Estadistica y Censos in Spanish Retrieved 4 June 2023 UCA Cae la indigencia y aumenta la pobreza en 2022 in Spanish Incidencia de la pobreza y la indigencia en 31 aglomerados urbanos PDF Indec Retrieved 4 June 2023 Poverty headcount ratio at 6 85 a day 2017 PPP of population Argentina World Bank Retrieved 4 June 2023 GINI index World Bank estimate World Bank Retrieved 4 June 2023 Human Development Index HDI hdr undp org HDRO Human Development Report Office United Nations Development Programme Retrieved 11 October 2022 Inequality adjusted HDI IHDI hdr undp org UNDP Retrieved 11 October 2022 Labor force total Argentina World Bank Retrieved 4 June 2023 Employment to population ratio 15 total national estimate Argentina World Bank Retrieved 4 June 2023 Empleo e Ingresos MECON Mercado de trabajo Tasas e indicadores socioeconomicos EPH 2022 PDF INDEC in Spanish Report for Selected Countries and Subjects IMF Retrieved 7 April 2021 El Gobierno confirmo una suba del 26 6 del salario minimo en tres tramos Retrieved 4 June 2023 Argentine Foreign Trade Statistics PDF Retrieved 4 June 2023 a b Argentine Foreign Trade Statistics PDF Retrieved 4 June 2023 Argentine Foreign Trade Statistics PDF Retrieved 4 June 2023 a b c d e f g h The World Factbook CIA gov Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 16 February 2019 a b c d e f Economic and financial data for Argentina MECON Archived from the original on 8 March 2013 Retrieved 10 May 2016 Cuentas internacionales in Spanish INDEC 10 February 2021 a b Finanzas Publicas Ministerio de Economia Gasto Publico por finalidad funcion INDEC Archived from the original on 16 December 2014 Retrieved 23 January 2015 S amp P raises Argentina local currency ratings B B with a stable outlook FTSE Global Markets 4 February 2016 Yosovitch Julian Vuelan las acciones en pesos a la par del dolar CCL Cronista com in Spanish Retrieved 7 August 2022 En lo que va de 2022 el peso argentino es la moneda que mas se deprecio en toda la region Agrositio com ar in Spanish Retrieved 7 August 2022 Nasdaq 24 June 2021 Argentina stands alone as MSCI yanks emerging market status Retrieved 16 August 2023 Argentina inflation soars past 100 mark BBC News 15 March 2023 Retrieved 15 March 2023 Report for Selected Countries and Subjects H Johnson amp J Robinson The World Atlas of Wine pg 300 301 Mitchell Beazley Publishing 2005 ISBN 1 84000 332 4 FAO permanent dead link Records en cosechas y exportacion de granos Archived 3 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Argentina en 2018 por FAO Azucar Trigo e cevada tem colheita recorde na safra 2018 19 argentina Sunflower Culture Argentina production in 2018 by FAO Argentina s livestock production in 2019 by FAO a b c d Argentine Foreign Trade 2015 PDF INDEC 18 February 2016 a b The Statesman s Yearbook Macmillan Publishers 2009 Major Wine Producers La Franco Argentine VINS ARGENTINS francoargentine com Archived from the original on 30 May 2010 Retrieved 5 June 2010 Store shelves grow bare as Argentine farmers continue strike CNN Crisis politica sorpresivo voto del vice Cobos contra las retenciones moviles kirchneristas Clarin 16 July 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k Nivel de actividad Economy Ministry ESS Website ESS Statistics home fao org a b Fontevecchia Agustino 14 September 2012 Big Oil Close To Argentina s YPF Chevron And Others Don t Fear Nationalization Forbes Technically Recoverable Shale Oil and Shale Gas Resources An Assessment of 137 Shale Formations in 41 Countries Outside the United States PDF U S Energy Information Administration EIA June 2013 Retrieved 18 May 2015 Investing in Argentina Mining PDF Archived from the original PDF on 12 February 2006 Economy Ministry of Argentina in Spanish USGS Lithium Production Statistics USGS Silver Production Statistics USGS Gold Production Statistics USGS Boron Production Statistics Manufacturing added value current US World vehicle production in 2019 World crude steel production PDF Archived from the original PDF on 30 January 2020 Retrieved 8 April 2021 Global crude steel output increases by 3 4 in 2019 Statistics of world production of barley beer and oils Evolucion de la industria nacional argentina Gestiopolis 7 February 2004 Informe Industria diciembre 2013 ADEFA Archived from the original on 11 January 2014 Informe de Prensa Diciembre 2021 PDF ADEFA December 2021 Retrieved 19 December 2022 Argentina Trade With Brazil 2012 Present maxinomics com Retrieved 20 December 2022 Ministra argentina pasamos de 80 a 314 parques industriales America Economia Fernandez pichetto 2014 12 03 3 December 2014 Crecio un 161 la produccion de computadoras en 2011 Tiempo Argentino Archived from the original on 6 November 2012 Latin America s telecoms mobile and broadband overview shared in new research report Whatech 3 May 2015 Archived from the original on 18 May 2015 El 60 de la maquinaria agricola vendida es de produccion nacional Argentina en Noticias 7 March 2014 Archived from the original on 15 April 2015 Retrieved 15 April 2015 Permisos de edificacion otorgados y superficie cubierta autorizada por tipo de construccion INDEC Archived from the original on 18 May 2015 CNEA Themes in Nuclear Energy and Physics Archived 2 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine El uso de dispositivos moviles crece en la Argentina y entusiasma a los anunciantes iProfesional 11 April 2011 El 95 de los usuarios moviles de Internet entra a redes sociales Cronista 17 February 2015 Argentina Internet Usage Stats and Market Reports Internet World Stats Accesos a Internet PDF Press release INDEC March 2015 Archived from the original PDF on 18 May 2015 Argentina The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Argentina Key Statistics Telecom Market and Regulatory Overviews BuddeComm Menos de la mitad de los comercios minoristas venden 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pavimentan 4 200 km y triplican red de autopistas Secretaria de Comunicacion 3 November 2013 Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 a b Advierten que faltan rutas para sostener el boom de los autos La Nacion Anuario 2012 Parque Automotor PDF ADEFA Archived from the original PDF on 28 July 2014 Ford A G 1958 Capital Exports and Growth for Argentina 1880 1914 The Economic Journal 68 271 589 593 doi 10 2307 2227581 JSTOR 2227581 HACIA DoNDE VA EL TREN ESTADO Y FERROCARRIL DESPUES DE LAS PRIVATIZACIONES Archived 22 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine University of Buenos Aires 17 April 2009 Detalles del proyecto para conectar todos los ferrocarriles urbanos debajo del Obelisco Buenos Aires Ciudad 12 May 2015 Otro salto en la recuperacion de soberania Pagina 12 16 April 2015 Es ley la creacion de Ferrocarriles Argentinos EnElSubte 15 April 2015 Ferrocarriles Argentinos Randazzo agradecio a la oposicion parlamentaria por acompanar en su recuperacion Archived 16 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Sala de Prensa de la Republica Argentina 15 April 2015 Boletin Oficial de Argentina N 32 644 Archived 29 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine Haran una inversion de US 2400 millones en el Belgrano Cargas La Nacion 6 December 2013 Sanchez Nora 26 November 2014 Los nuevos trenes del Mitre asombro en los pasajeros y viajes mas comodos They premiered the Chinese train formations to Tigre in Spanish Buenos Aires commuter routes renationalised Railway Gazette 3 March 2015 Los nuevos trenes a Mar del Plata funcionaran desde este viernes on Telam 19 December 2014 El Tren a las Nubes volvio a funcionar InfoBAE 5 April 2015 Salio de Retiro el primer tren 0km con pasajeros a Rosario InfoBAE 1 April 2015 Empezo a circular el tren que une Posadas y Encarnacion Territorio Digital January 2015 Buenos Aires Transport Subway Kwintessential co uk Archived from the original on 31 May 2013 Retrieved 10 February 2011 Aumento un 12 la cantidad de usuarios que usan el subte a diario La Nacion 7 May 2015 Encyclopaedia Britannica Book of the Year various issues statistical appendix Mas de 25 millones de pasajeros aereos transportados en Argentina HostelTur 17 January 2014 List of importing markets for the product exported by Argentina in 2022 all products www trademap org a b c INDEC foreign trade span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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