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Argentina must urgently engage in crucial talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to address its impending debt crisis.

Argentina and IMF Face $44 Billion Dilemma in Crucial Debt Talks

By Walter Bianchi and Rodrigo Campos

BUENOS AIRES/NEW YORK (Reuters) – Argentina and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) have a $44 billion dilemma, with the two sides set to meet for crunch talks to revamp the country’s huge, wobbling debt deal, key to avoiding default on billions in looming debt payments.

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The South American country, a serial defaulter that has struggled for years with inflation and currency crises, struck a $57 billion loan deal with the IMF in 2018, which failed and was replaced last year with a new $44 billion program.

But with net foreign currency reserves estimated to be in negative territory, hit by a major drought that sunk the key soy and corn harvests, Argentina is at risk again of missing debt repayments, with $2.7 billion due to the fund this month alone.

Economy Minister Sergio Massa is expected in Washington as early as this week to try to unlock talks to accelerate IMF disbursements and ease economic targets attached to the deal, with investors and traders watching closely.

“The fund knows that Argentina is a problem, it is its main debtor, but it seems to me that the negotiation has stagnated. One does not see significant progress,” said Ricardo Delgado of Argentine financial services firm Analytica.

In a sign of potential holds-ups, an economy ministry source said on Friday that Massa’s trip, previously briefed to happen in the next few days, could be delayed depending on how virtual talks progressed.

“Until everything is sealed, no one travels. When everything is ready, they’ll travel to put things on paper. And when everything is written, Massa will travel,” the source said.

On the streets of Buenos Aires pressure is rising. Inflation has hit 114%, hurting salaries and spending power, reserves have tumbled and one-in-four people is in poverty, with many blaming – not for the first time – austerity linked to the IMF.

“We must change these economic policies, we must break with the dependence on the IMF,” said Hugo Godoy, a union leader marching on Friday in Buenos Aires as part of protests against the government’s handling of the economy and austerity.

“Some 43% of Argentines live below the poverty line and 4.5 million, 10% of the population, suffer from hunger,” he said.

‘Damage Control’

The government is hoping to bring forward over $10 billion in IMF disbursements scheduled for this year, though is reluctant to agree to tough austerity measures with an eye on October general elections where it faces likely defeat.

“Investors are paying real attention to signs from the IMF negotiations,” said economist Gustavo Ber.

“Receiving fresh funds – or at least rescheduling disbursements and payments – would be crucial to reduce exchange and financial tensions at this stage.”

Meanwhile Argentina has been rolling over local debt to push back peso-denominated repayments, has extended a currency swap line with China, and faces a wall of obligations with private foreign creditors next year.

The local debt exchanges and hopes of progress with the IMF have nudged up Argentina’s dollar-denominated bonds from high-20 cents on the dollar in May to mid-30 cents now, though they remain mired in distressed territory.

And many worry that even sped-up IMF payouts won’t solve Argentina’s problems for long.

“Frontloading disbursements could be a ‘damage control’ solution until the end of the current government’s term in December,” the Institute of International Finance, a Washington-based banking trade group, said in a report.

Argentina got a hint of good news this week with monthly inflation cooling in May for the first time in half a year and coming in below analyst expectations, though it was still an eye-watering 7.8% for the month.

“Inflation continues to be very high and affects the entire economic scenario, but the fact that it has eased somewhat with respect to April helps to remove some pressure,” an Argentine banker said, asking not to be named.

“It is like the sick patient with a fever that has gone down slightly. But the patient is still sick and still has a fever.”

(Reporting by Walter Bianchi and Rodrigo Campos; Editing by Adam Jourdan and Daniel Wallis)

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