Argentina's Senate Poses Threat to Macri's Agenda
By Patrick Gillespie
May 30, 2018, 8:39 AM CDT
Senators to vote on bill to limit increase in utility prices
Macri needs to speed up fiscal consolidation as IMF deal looms
Mauricio Macri Photographer:
Christopher Goodney/Bloomberg
Argentine President Mauricio Macri faces one of his toughest domestic battles on Wednesday as the Senate prepares to vote on a bill that would limit his ability to narrow the fiscal deficit amid talks with the IMF for a credit line.
Lawmakers will vote on a bill that would curtail Macris ability to continue raising prices on utilities, such as natural gas and electricity, at 2 p.m. in Buenos Aires. The subsidies, which rose under former president and now Senator Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, are unsustainable and the bill is unconstitutional, Macri said on Monday. He said he will veto it if it reaches his desk.
The proposal, if passed, would hinder Macris efforts to reduce Argentinas fiscal deficit, which is the focal point of the governments negotiations with the International Monetary Fund. This week the Macri administration unveiled a plan to to cut 20 billion pesos ($805 million) from this years budget to bring it closer to its 2018 fiscal deficit target of 2.7 percent of gross domestic product. Macri has gradually pulled back subsidies that soared under Fernandez, an advocate of the current bill.
If Macri vetoes the bill, it would go back to the lower house, which would need a two-thirds majority to overturn the veto. In the bills first vote in the lower house, it fell short of that threshold. The bill proposes returning utility prices to levels last seen in November. The legislation tests the clout of Macri, who at times has convinced opposition lawmakers to pass his reforms. He urged them Monday not to vote for the bill.
More:
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-05-30/argentina-senate-poses-threat-to-macri-agenda-amid-imf-talks