Business leaders in Argentina oppose dollarization, according to Argentina Inc.

Business leaders in Argentina oppose dollarization, according to Argentina Inc.


MAR DEL PLATA, Argentina, Oct 6 (Reuters) – Corporate Argentina is strongly against full dollarization of the economy, one‌ of the key proposals of presidential election frontrunner Javier⁤ Milei, according to 125​ business people Reuters spoke to.

At a major corporate summit in the seaside city of Mar del Plata, Reuters asked business executives from a wide array ⁣of sectors whether they wanted the⁣ government to stick with the peso,⁤ change to a dual peso-dollar system or make a total ‌switch to the dollar. Only two people backed full dollarization.

The survey gives the clearest and most in-depth view yet on⁢ how corporate Argentina sees the dollarization debate, which is ‍at the heart of the election race ​towards‌ the Oct. 22 vote.

Some⁣ two-thirds of those Reuters spoke to supported a bi-monetary system proposed by conservative candidate Patricia Bullrich, who⁤ is popular with business leaders but lagging ⁣in wider opinion polls.⁣ Almost a third favored sticking with the peso,⁤ despite its recent slide⁣ and triple-digit inflation.

“It is really challenging for companies⁤ based in Argentina to​ think about‌ dollarization,” said one senior auto sector executive who​ asked not to be named, citing issues faced by other‌ dollarized economies like Ecuador⁤ and El Salvador.

“We⁣ are left without an anchor to adjust monetary variables ⁣and the experiences in‍ other‌ countries ⁤have not been good.”

The strong corporate opposition underscores one⁣ of​ the challenges a potential future president Milei would face in‌ pushing through his plans for the economy, which also include ⁢eventually shutting the central bank.

Rival​ candidate Sergio Massa,⁢ the ruling ‍coalition’s economy chief, supports sticking with the⁣ peso, but ‌has struggled to bring down inflation or arrest depreciation.

Argentines will vote on ⁣Oct. 22, with a run-off a month later if ‍no candidate wins outright, meaning getting 45% of the ​vote or 40% with a 10-point lead.

Most business people surveyed at the IDEA business summit said it was important to keep the peso to be able to adjust monetary variables and maintain competitiveness. A full switch to the⁣ dollar would mean losing monetary policy levers.

In the survey, some 80% said they would prefer ⁤a Bullrich government, backing her plans to‍ normalize the ​economy. Some 11% leaned towards Massa and just 7% were in favor of Milei.

Most of those surveyed put the ‍peso’s real value at between 650⁢ and 1,000 per dollar, far weaker than the‍ controlled official rate⁢ of 350 pesos. The ⁢country has strict capital controls limiting official foreign exchange trades, which has stoked popular parallel markets.

Reporting by Jorge Otaola;⁢ Editing by Adam Jourdan​ and Rosalba O’Brien

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Original from www.reuters.com

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