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 Milei's Triumph Meets Fitch's Doubt-Argentina's Default Shadow Persists
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Just days after President Javier Milei celebrated a decisive midterm election victory-securing over 40% of the vote and nearly tripling his party's presence in Congress-the cold reality of Argentina's economic fragility reared its head.
Credit rating agency Fitch, in a sobering reminder, kept the country's sovereign debt at "CCC+", a rating just steps away from default. The message was clear: political momentum alone won't fix Argentina's deep-rooted crises.
The election, held on October 26, was supposed to be a turning point. Milei's free-market reforms had already tamed hyperinflation, slashing it from over 200% to 31.8%, and balanced the budget for the first time in years.
Markets responded with cautious optimism-the peso jumped 9%, and bond yields dropped sharply. But Fitch's decision to maintain the near-junk rating exposed the limits of Milei' progress.
The agency's concern? Argentina still relies too heavily on external lifelines, including a $40 billion rescue package from the U.S.-$20 billion in currency swaps and another $20 billion in loans-rather than sustainable growth. Without deeper structural changes, the risk of another financial meltdown looms large.
The problem isn't just economics-it's trust. Argentina's foreign reserves remain perilously low, with much of its cash tied up in gold or loans from China. The U.S. aid provides temporary relief, but it's not a long-term solution.
Milei now faces a race against time: push through privatizations, tax cuts, and labor reforms before investor patience wears thin.
His challenge is compounded by a fractured Congress, where he lacks a majority and must negotiate with wary opponents who resist his aggressive agenda.
For Argentines, the stakes are personal. Pensions and wages have lost value, unemployment is rising, and public services are stretched thin.
Yet many voters, weary of decades of economic mismanagement, have chosen to stick with Milei's painful but decisive approach. The alternative-a return to the policies that led to repeated defaults-holds little appeal.
The Fitch warning is a wake-up call. Milei's election win bought him time, but the clock is ticking. If he can't turn political capital into lasting reform, Argentina' cycle of crisis will continue.
The world is watching, but for Argentines, the question is simple: Will this time be different, or is another collapse inevitable?
 Credit rating agency Fitch, in a sobering reminder, kept the country's sovereign debt at "CCC+", a rating just steps away from default. The message was clear: political momentum alone won't fix Argentina's deep-rooted crises.
The election, held on October 26, was supposed to be a turning point. Milei's free-market reforms had already tamed hyperinflation, slashing it from over 200% to 31.8%, and balanced the budget for the first time in years.
Markets responded with cautious optimism-the peso jumped 9%, and bond yields dropped sharply. But Fitch's decision to maintain the near-junk rating exposed the limits of Milei' progress.
The agency's concern? Argentina still relies too heavily on external lifelines, including a $40 billion rescue package from the U.S.-$20 billion in currency swaps and another $20 billion in loans-rather than sustainable growth. Without deeper structural changes, the risk of another financial meltdown looms large.
The problem isn't just economics-it's trust. Argentina's foreign reserves remain perilously low, with much of its cash tied up in gold or loans from China. The U.S. aid provides temporary relief, but it's not a long-term solution.
Milei now faces a race against time: push through privatizations, tax cuts, and labor reforms before investor patience wears thin.
His challenge is compounded by a fractured Congress, where he lacks a majority and must negotiate with wary opponents who resist his aggressive agenda.
For Argentines, the stakes are personal. Pensions and wages have lost value, unemployment is rising, and public services are stretched thin.
Yet many voters, weary of decades of economic mismanagement, have chosen to stick with Milei's painful but decisive approach. The alternative-a return to the policies that led to repeated defaults-holds little appeal.
The Fitch warning is a wake-up call. Milei's election win bought him time, but the clock is ticking. If he can't turn political capital into lasting reform, Argentina' cycle of crisis will continue.
The world is watching, but for Argentines, the question is simple: Will this time be different, or is another collapse inevitable?
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