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Argentina Government Will swallow $26 Billion Worth of Private Pension Funds


By Bill Bonner • November 3rd, 2008 • Related Articles • Filed Under

About the Author

Bill BonnerBest-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing, one of the world's most successful consumer newsletter companies. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning.

See All Articles by This Author

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Filed Under: Market
Tags: argentina government • buenos aires • private pension funds
feature photo

Last week, at the annual convention of the nation’s mortgage bankers in San Francisco, protestors used bullhorns to heckle attendees; they demanded a moratorium on foreclosures.

Meanwhile, south of the Rio Plata, a mob formed in Buenos Aires too. Their gripe was that the government of Christina Fernandez de Kirschner was grabbing their pension money. ‘No way,’ replied the queen of the pampas. We are just going to “rescue” it from the wicked capitalists. Like a Doberman rescuing a hot dog, the Argentina government will swallow $26 billion worth of private pension funds. The federales say they are taking the money into protective custody. It will just “disappear,” say protesters.

The signal on the flag here unfurling is that, compared to the Argentines, the American mob is a bunch of naive chiselers. At least the gauchos can tell the difference between self-delusion and grand larceny. But the average cab driver in Buenos Aires knows more about financial crises than Trichet, Brown and Paulson put together. His training comes neither from Keynes nor Smith. The great Anglo-Saxon economists may have laid out their theories of political economy. But they left some important holes. Argentina’s presidents have filled in the blanks. And what the typical Argentine has learned, the English and the Americans are about to discover for themselves.

Leaving Argentina, our cab driver tried a familiar flimflam. Hearing a foreign accent, he said: “My meter is broken...but the fare to the airport is always a flat 200 pesos.” On the pampas, no self-respecting taxi driver gives a sucker an even break. But then, rarely do markets or governments, either.

“What is the message that the government is giving to the people today?” asks Argentine economist, Roberto Cachanosky. “That it is ready to take their revenues and their savings with no limit...and also, that they will continue to give out information and make announcements that, to say it gently, have no connection to reality.”

“The only secure retirement is one backed by the state,” said a member of the Peronist party, proving Cachanosky’s point. As the country approached bankruptcy in 2001, its leaders followed the traditions of all Peronists, Democrats, Republicans, and National Socialists; when they get themselves in a jamb. First, they lie. Then they steal.

Argentina has a parallel system of state-owned and privately-owned pension accounts. Its state system pension payments were cut by 14% in 2001, and then cut an addition 66% when the peso was devalued the following year. Now, the Kirschner government is nationalizing the private accounts. Set up in 1993, these funds must invest 60% of their money in Argentine bonds. Naturally, bonds backed by the Argentine government are not necessarily the strongest credits in the world. Argentine peso bonds – like pensions – are adjusted for inflation. But the government lies, with a measure of inflation that is less than half the real 30% rate. As to the dollar bonds, it steals. In 2001, it defaulted on $95 billion worth of loans made by overseas lenders. It didn’t settle up until 4 years later – stiffing the foreigners for 70%. And now the government is in trouble again; it must make a big payment to overseas lenders in 2009. Its main exports – soybeans, gas and oil – are down about 50% this year. And the country has more public debt than it did when it defaulted seven years ago. That’s why the private pension accounts are being seized; the government needs the money.

Things have a way of disappearing in Argentina. After WWII, hundreds, maybe thousands, of Nazis arrived in Buenos Aires from Europe, never to be seen again. Whether people are wanted by the law, or not wanted by the lawmakers, they have a way of vanishing. In the 1970s, when the generals running Argentina wanted to get rid of their opponents, they called on the old Nazis to help ‘disappear’ thousands of them.

Money disappears too. More than a half century ago, Evita Peron posed as an angel. She set up charitable organizations to help the poor and handed out Christmas presents, personally. After the holidays, she went back to her tricks – making the money disappear from the charitable funds and re-appear in her Swiss bank account. And then, after her spirit gave the world the slip, Evita’s own corpse disappeared. People wondered what had happened to the husk of her, until it was retrieved by Juan Peron 16 years later.

Senora Fernandez is a practiced magician too. Her recent acts of larceny have included disappearing Aerolineas Argentina from its Spanish owners...and then disappearing the profits of the nation’s farmers, first by preventing them from selling on the open market and then by imposing a confiscatory tax (later withdrawn) on exports.

“Nationalizing private pensions is theft,” said Juan Domingo Peron himself. The Peronists say they are only acting in the public interest – like the U.S. Treasury and the Bank of England. We would never have done this had there not been a world while financial crisis, they explain.

“The question that many people ask themselves,” continues Robert Cachanosky is: ‘what rate of interest do you need to compensate for the risk of keeping assets within the reach of a government desperate for more funds?”

Answering Cachanosky’s question, today, you can buy 8.28% Argentine bonds at 22 cents on the dollar – giving you a yield of 31%. By comparison, a US 10-year Treasury note, at less than 4% yield, looks like a broken taxi meter to us.

Bill Bonner
The Daily Reckoning Australia

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Related Articles:

  • Cattle Prices Have Risen Only 1% This Year
  • The Distrust of Argentina’s Finances
  • Estancia: One of the Most Enjoyable Places in the World to Live
  • The World of Money Seems a Million Miles Away
  • Need money? Just Take it From Accounts in the Country’s Banks

About the Author

Bill BonnerBest-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing, one of the world's most successful consumer newsletter companies. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning.

See All Posts by This Author

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