ONLINE EVENT: After the Vote—What’s Next for Mexico’s Judiciary?

Baires. Julio 5 de 2015. El jefe de Gobierno porteño, Mauricio Macri, emitio su voto esta mañana en las Elecciones Generales de renovación de autoridades que se realizan en la Ciudad de Buenos Aires.- FotoNico Bovio-gv/GCBA.-

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    Argentina Is Getting Impatient With Macri’s Painful Economic Reforms

    Last October, Argentine President Mauricio Macri celebrated the triumph of his Cambiemos, or “Let’s Change,” coalition in midterm legislative elections. For Macri, the victory represented a much-needed public endorsement of his agenda of incremental economic reforms, known as “gradualismo.” Looking at the midterm results, some analysts and politicians practically guaranteed that Macri would be re-elected in 2019. In Argentina, however, a few months can be an eternity, and Macri is now facing a string of bad economic news which has increased popular discontent and fired up a resurgent opposition.

    Macri won the 2015 presidential elections by promising that his plan for economic reforms, though painful at first, would reignite economic growth after years of stagnation and contain inflation, a chronic problem for Argentina. Yet after more than two years, the second part of the deal has not come true for many Argentines, who seem to be losing their patience. Macri’s gradualism—including trade liberalization, the promotion of market competition and the reduction of Argentina’s fiscal deficit by cutting massive state subsidies—simply hasn’t delivered results yet.

    […]

    Read the full article in World Politics Review

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