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Markets Can't Run On Tweets: Argentina's Executives Press For Clear Tax And Labor Rules
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) More than a thousand owners and executives gathered in Mar del Plata for the 61st IDEA Colloquium with a simple ask of President Javier Milei's government: stop changing the rules.
Under the banner“Juega Argentina: a competir, producir, innovar,” speakers said investment won't arrive without long-term predictability, simpler taxes, and modern labor rules.
Milei skipped the event; his spokesperson, Manuel Adorni, delivered a message promising a reform push and betting on a more cooperative Congress after the October 26 midterms.
On stage, the tone was measured. Mariano Bosch, who chairs this year's colloquium, pressed for“rules of the game” that don't shift every few weeks.
IDEA chair Santiago Mignone praised stabilization and fiscal restraint but called them“necessary, not sufficient,” pointing to tax and labor changes as the next big tests.
In hallway conversations, executives welcomed lower macro noise yet warned that policy flip-flops and sharp rate swings still make it hard to plan hires, financing, or exports.
Hovering over the conference was new U.S. backing. Washington has moved to steady the peso and is advancing a two-part package: a $20 billion currency-swap line and efforts to arrange another $20 billion in private-sector financing linked to Argentina 's debt market.
Argentina's dollar support buys time but rules matter more
The money could calm the exchange rate and ease dollar shortages. But business leaders view it as breathing room, not a substitute for clear domestic rules-especially after recent political comments from Washington reminded investors that support can be fragile.
Energy symbolized the longer game. YPF 's leadership talked up Vaca Muerta shale and LNG as export engines that need stable regulations to unlock multi-year capital.
The message from the private sector was consistent: give us predictability, and the projects-and jobs-follow. Why this matters, in plain terms: when governments change rules or taxes without warning, companies freeze investment.
Stable, transparent rules lower borrowing costs, bring in fresh capital, and create jobs. U.S. support may buy time before and after the vote, but the decisive factor is whether Argentina can lock in stable, comprehensible rules so firms can plan beyond the next headline.
Under the banner“Juega Argentina: a competir, producir, innovar,” speakers said investment won't arrive without long-term predictability, simpler taxes, and modern labor rules.
Milei skipped the event; his spokesperson, Manuel Adorni, delivered a message promising a reform push and betting on a more cooperative Congress after the October 26 midterms.
On stage, the tone was measured. Mariano Bosch, who chairs this year's colloquium, pressed for“rules of the game” that don't shift every few weeks.
IDEA chair Santiago Mignone praised stabilization and fiscal restraint but called them“necessary, not sufficient,” pointing to tax and labor changes as the next big tests.
In hallway conversations, executives welcomed lower macro noise yet warned that policy flip-flops and sharp rate swings still make it hard to plan hires, financing, or exports.
Hovering over the conference was new U.S. backing. Washington has moved to steady the peso and is advancing a two-part package: a $20 billion currency-swap line and efforts to arrange another $20 billion in private-sector financing linked to Argentina 's debt market.
Argentina's dollar support buys time but rules matter more
The money could calm the exchange rate and ease dollar shortages. But business leaders view it as breathing room, not a substitute for clear domestic rules-especially after recent political comments from Washington reminded investors that support can be fragile.
Energy symbolized the longer game. YPF 's leadership talked up Vaca Muerta shale and LNG as export engines that need stable regulations to unlock multi-year capital.
The message from the private sector was consistent: give us predictability, and the projects-and jobs-follow. Why this matters, in plain terms: when governments change rules or taxes without warning, companies freeze investment.
Stable, transparent rules lower borrowing costs, bring in fresh capital, and create jobs. U.S. support may buy time before and after the vote, but the decisive factor is whether Argentina can lock in stable, comprehensible rules so firms can plan beyond the next headline.

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