En relación a [PEN-L:1448] Re: Re: Re: Re: RE: Re: Argentina/GD, 
el 7 Sep 00, a las 22:12, Brad DeLong dijo:

> >The first
> >hyperinflation was a coup d'etat. It was provoked intentionally
> >(there are proofs and declarations in this sense, as well as there
> >are others on the milder hyperinflation provoked in 1975 to generate
> >the chaos that led to the 1976 coup) and ended with the downfall of
> >Alfonsín.
> 
> Provoked intentionally by whom? The central bank? The Alfonsin
> government?

Ah, Brad, you are forcing me to break my votes. Not a way to get to 
Paradise. Will answer this but next time, please refer to bibliography. 

By the Argentinian ruling class, a very compact "rosca" ("lobby") 
which has the advantage of being the ONLY class in Argentina with 
clear consciousness of their class goals. In 1989 it was very easy 
for a gang of bankers and foreign trade speculators to forge a 
scarcity of foreign currency, for example. And they did it. By the 
way, I personally benefitted from that, because I had earned some 
dollars in a job, and had contracted a week of vacations with the 
"old" exchange rate, only to find that hyperinflation in the midst of 
the vacations had magically multiplied the purchasing power of my 
scant savings, and could thus multiply the days at the hotel...

Jim Devine has given you some hints, and curiously enough without 
trying to show that he knows anything on Argentina, on how might 
things happen here.  Are  you always so undeservedly haughty and so 
despective of the concrete realities outside your own country?

> 
> Brad DeLong
> 



Néstor Miguel Gorojovsky
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to