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Argentina Lets Peso Float Freely

Economy: Currency avoids a plunge, dipping 5% in value. Product hoarding continues amid fears of inflation.

The World

February 12, 2002|HECTOR TOBAR and CHRIS KRAUL, TIMES STAFF WRITERS

BUENOS AIRES — Following days of uncertainty, hoarding and repeated calls for calm, Argentina allowed its currency to float freely against the dollar for the first time in a decade Monday. The peso slipped slightly in value but did not suffer the free fall many feared.

Hundreds of people lined up outside exchange houses in Buenos Aires, the capital, where the dollar sold for about 2.1 pesos, a drop of about 5% from the peso's unofficial value Friday. The day of relative calm represented an important--if temporary--victory for the government of Eduardo Duhalde, which is struggling to rescue Argentina from economic collapse.


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In the hours before trading opened, officials repeatedly assured nervous Argentines that if necessary the central bank would use some of its $14 billion in cash reserves to keep the value of the peso at "a reasonable level."

Since a partial devaluation Jan. 11, the peso has traded at two levels: an official rate, 1.4 to the dollar, for most government transactions, and a free-floating rate set by the market. The government now has, in effect, allowed the market to set one peso rate.

Still, "the government will not sit with its arms crossed, doing nothing," Anibal Fernandez, Duhalde's chief of staff, said Monday morning on a radio show. "The government will intervene as is necessary to defend the peso."

The full peso devaluation comes as the government tries to end months of economic instability and social unrest that have seen five presidents, a freeze on many banking transactions and daily street protests. Unemployment has surged, hitting 22% this month.

Monday's closing rate represents a 52% drop in the peso's value compared with December, when it traded one-for-one with the dollar. Argentina's decade-long policy of keeping the peso equivalent to the dollar nearly bankrupted the country and helped lead to the rioting that brought down President Fernando de la Rua on Dec. 20.

"I'm coming to buy [dollars] because it's not clear what's going to happen next," said Isabel Pessoa, 35, as she waited outside an exchange house. "I prefer having dollars because it's always the most sure thing to have."

Fears of a new round of hyper-inflation sent Argentines scurrying to supermarkets to hoard foodstuffs and household items, including cooking oil, sugar, pasta and cleaning goods.

Inflation reached 3.6% just in the month of January. Prices for a wide range of consumer goods, from apples to computer supplies, have risen even more dramatically in the past week.

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