INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
2025.The IMF projects 5.5% GDP growth in 2025, fueled by rebounding consumption and investment
from 200% under the previous government to 3%.This reform, paired with a $20 billion IMF agreement, enabled Argentina to introduce a managed
2017, Driven by Real Gains
The fiscal deficit turned to a surplus for the first time since 2010, with public spending cuts equivalent to 15% of GDP.Sectoral growth
diverges: construction and manufacturing expanded 11% and 3.4% quarterly in late 2024, while agriculture and mining drove export
rebounds.Critics highlight lingering inequality, with the Gini coefficient hitting a 20-year high
leader 15 months into office since 2003
for post-crisis recovery, albeit with uneven gains.