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- <text id=89TT1518>
- <title>
- June 12, 1989: The Fall And Fall Of Argentina
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 12, 1989 Massacre In Beijing
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 47
- The Fall and Fall of Argentina
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Amid hyperinflation and hunger, a nation drifts into chaos
- </p>
- <p> The crowd began to gather silently last Monday afternoon on
- the streets adjoining the Boerio Supermarket in Rosario,
- Argentina's third-largest city. The tin-roofed grocery store
- had served its middle-class neighborhood for years, so manager
- Luis Nicastro recognized many of the well-dressed people outside
- the store as his regular customers. Some of the others were
- toothless, hungry folk in tattered clothes, who came from nearby
- shantytowns. By 2 p.m., a mob of more than 500 filled the
- parking lot. "I thought of closing the doors," Nicastro says.
- "But what good would it do? With all this glass, there was
- nothing we could do but let them in."
- </p>
- <p> The crowd held back while a group of 40 hungry women and
- children rushed into the Boerio and grabbed as much milk, flour
- and sugar as they could carry. As they fled, the ransacking
- began in earnest. Young, strapping men armed with crowbars
- knocked spaghetti, oranges and hunks of meat onto the floor as
- they rushed to scoop up groceries. Others carted off boxes of
- laundry detergent, frozen foods and toilet paper into their
- Peugots, Volvos and even waiting taxis. Within 20 minutes they
- had destroyed the bakery at the rear of the store, smashed out
- the windows and broken open the cash registers. As the looters
- left, one of them, laughing hilariously, asked Nicastro, "What
- time do you open tomorrow?"
- </p>
- <p> After years of tottering on the brink of economic crisis,
- Argentina started sliding into chaos last week. In food riots
- that erupted in Rosario, Cordoba, Buenos Aires and other major
- cities, more than 2,000 people were arrested and at least 15
- killed. The primary trigger: hyperinflationary price increases
- that have left even middle-class citizens unable to afford food
- and other necessities. Inflation for the month of May reached
- 75%, and is accelerating at a pace that would amount to more
- than 80,000% for the year. Said David Feldman, news director of
- Radio Rosario: "It's not just hunger. People are crazed. There
- is extreme tension here."
- </p>
- <p> The upheaval began two weeks ago, with isolated outbreaks
- of looting in several provincial capitals. Widespread food riots
- broke out in Rosario (pop. 957,000) early last week, after
- lame-duck President Raul Alfonsin announced his fourth emergency
- economic plan of the year. Roving crowds, described by police
- as a mixture of the hungry, the criminal and the opportunistic,
- overwhelmed poorly prepared local police. Stores not gutted by
- looters closed their doors, creating widespread food shortages.
- The unrest then spread to the volatile working-class suburbs of
- Buenos Aires.
- </p>
- <p> Alfonsin responded by declaring a 30-day state of siege,
- which entitles police to detain suspected looters without
- charging them. The President, following the lead of provincial
- leaders, also ordered the creation of hundreds of soup kitchens
- and the free distribution of food. Some measure of order was
- restored after four days, but many citizens were calling for
- Alfonsin, whose Radical Civic Union party was convincingly
- defeated by Peronist Carlos Saul Menem in May 14 elections, to
- step down before his term ends on Dec. 10. When the two men met
- last week, however, they apparently agreed that an early
- transition would suit neither one. Alfonsin wants a normal,
- democratic transfer of power -- Argentina's first since 1928 --
- while Menem and his sharply divided party realize they have no
- comprehensive plan for stitching together the shattered economy.
- </p>
- <p> The country's eruption was the second such outburst to hit
- debt-stricken Latin America this year. In February and March
- more than 300 people died in Venezuela during protests against
- an austerity program aimed at bringing down a foreign debt of
- $30 billion. Argentina, which has a $60 billion external debt,
- has made no payments since April 1988.
- </p>
- <p> The economy, desultory even in the best of times, is now
- virtually shut down. Automobile, tire and auto-parts production
- have come to a stop. Ranchers have halted delivery of cattle
- because they are being paid with uncashable checks. The
- government cannot print money fast enough, so a severe cash
- shortage has prompted bank closings. Because the austral has
- lost 90% of its value since February, most people try to conduct
- their business in U.S. dollars, although it is now illegal to
- do so. According to private estimates, what is left of the
- economy runs on $500 million worth of austral notes and $5
- billion in U.S. currency.
- </p>
- <p> Food riots in a country considered to be one of the world's
- breadbaskets amounted to a devastating indictment of the
- Alfonsin government, which failed to act quickly enough to put
- Argentina's fiscal house back in order in 1983, when Alfonsin
- became the first civilian President in nearly eight years. The
- former human-rights activist valued political stability at the
- expense of wrenching but necessary economic changes to correct
- the country's low productivity, over-regulation, bloated public
- payroll and money-losing state-owned companies. By the time
- Alfonsin began pushing for economic reforms in 1985, his
- popularity had eroded, and the Peronist-controlled Congress was
- able to block his moves.
- </p>
- <p> Now Argentinians have turned their eyes to Menem. But since
- the President-elect has yet to define a concrete economic plan,
- the situation seems bound to deteriorate further. Even
- Argentina's generals, who have never been shy about staging
- coups before, appear reluctant to intervene for fear of saddling
- themselves with the blame for economic ruin. "We are in a
- process of decline," says Federico Zorraquin, president of the
- Banco Commercial del Norte. "No one knows where it will end."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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