Euros & Dollars: Javier Milei’s War on Inflation
The president of Argentina wants to make it illegal to print money for budget deficits. Economic theory says he is right, but the politics of the welfare state may get in his way.
The president of Argentina wants to make it illegal to print money for budget deficits. Economic theory says he is right, but the politics of the welfare state may get in his way.
While other Western nations have dithered in their support to Israel, President Javier Milei supports Israel’s right to defend itself against “the face of modern Nazism.”
Argentina’s new political cycle offers a window of opportunity for those who believe in truth, goodness, and beauty.
President Milei offers a message of hope and a plan to restore Argentina.
The drastic devaluation of the peso marks the beginning of President Milei’s crusade against inflation in Argentina. But he needs more than that to succeed.
Ordinary Argentines have found in Milei a compatriot willing to take the bull by the horns.
His policies include radically shrinking the size of the government and replacing the peso with the U.S. dollar.
Establishment candidate Sergio Massa surprised observers by winning the most votes in the election’s first round.
To evolve from libertarian icon to statesman, the Argentinian candidate needs to think beyond the material.
A slow-motion economic meltdown in Argentina has handed the initiative to eccentric libertarian populist Javier Milei who romped home first in primaries over the weekend.
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