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A Libertarian Landslide in Argentina

After a libertarian candidate took first place in Argentina’s presidential primary back in August, I wrote that the runoff would be the most important election of 2023 (even more important than the fortunately failed referendum to weaken TABOR in Colorado).

Amazingly, Argentinian voters opted for the libertarian by a strong 56-44 margin. To understand President-Elect Milei’s approach to the budget, here is a very encouraging video (with English subtitles).

A kindred spirit!

So why did Argentine voters opt for a radical libertarian after repeatedly voting for statists?

Did they finally realize that they ran out of other people’s money?

I assume part of the answer is that they realize their country is in economic decline. Here’s a chart I shared last week at a speech in Miami. It shows that Argentina was one of the world’s richest nations after WWII, but has suffered a dramatic drop because of bad policy.

The establishment media’s coverage of the election has been mostly fair, but there are some errors.

For instance, here’s some of what Samantha Schmidt and David Feliba wrote for the Washington Post.

A radical libertarian…rode a wave of voter rage to win Argentina’s presidency on Sunday, crushing the political establishment and bringing the sharpest turn to the right in four decades of democracy in the country. Javier Milei…claimed nearly 56 percent of the vote in a stunning upset over Sergio Massa, the center-left economy minister… With Milei, Argentina takes a leap into the unknown — with a leader promising to shatter the entire system. …Wielding chain saws on the campaign trail, the wild-haired Milei vowed to slash public spending in a country heavily dependent on government subsidies. He pledged to dollarize the economy, shut down the central bank and cut the number of government ministries from 18 to eight. …He has branded Pope Francis, an Argentine, an “evil” leftist. Climate change, he says, is a “socialist lie.” …Jonathan Aguero, a 32-year-old…father of two…has felt shortchanged by his country’s economic troubles for his entire life. …“We’ve already seen what Peronism has done. We need a change.

Almost everything in the article is accurate and balanced. But the big exception is the claim that Milei’s policies are “a leap into the unknown.”

That’s nonsense. Milei is simply proposing to go back to the limited-government policies that enabled Argentina to become rich before Peronism caused a dramatic slide.

Those are the same policies, by the way, that enabled the western world to become rich in the 1800s. And the policies that enabled mass prosperity after WWII in Asia’s tiger economies.

Next, here are excerpts from a report for the New York Times by Jack Nicas.

Mr. Milei, 53, an economist and former television personality with little political experience, burst onto the traditionally closed Argentine political scene with a brash style…and a series of extreme proposals that he says are needed to upend a broken economy and government. …He has also proposed…loosening regulations on guns and considering only countries that want to “fight against socialism” as Argentina’s allies… Mr. Milei’s election is a victory for the global far-right movement that gained strength with the election of Mr. Trump and similar politicians, among them Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil… He has clear differences with the two other politicians, including his strong adherence to a libertarian ideology… Mr. Milei will now confront a major challenge that virtually no other Argentine president has been able to solve for decades: the Argentine economy. Failed economic policies have long left Argentina with one of the world’s most perpetually unstable economies, yet even by its standards, the nation of 46 million is in one of its worst crises. …for many Argentines, Mr. Milei will be a welcome break from Peronism, the political movement that has held the presidency for 16 of the past 20 years, mostly installing leftist policies over that period that have jerked the country from boom to bust.

Once again, the story is mostly fair. I especially applaud the reporter for acknowledging that Milei’s libertarian agenda is not the same as Trump’s big-government approach.

But there is an error. The reporter says that Peronist policies have “jerked the country from boom to bust.”

But that merely implies volatility, with bad periods being offset by good periods. But you can see in the chart above that statism has produced long-run decline. At the very least, the sentence should have stated that excessive government has “jerked the country from weak boom to deep bust.”

Let’s conclude with the observation that Milei takes office next month and he will face a less-than-friendly legislature. So will he have the ability to dollarize and make other reforms? I don’t know the answer, but it’s very encouraging that at least Milei understands the recipe for growth and prosperity.

23 Responses

  1. […] couple of weeks ago, I shared some good news about President Milei‘s efforts to rescue Argentina’s […]


  2. […] I can’t resist asking whether Argentina’s new libertarian president is a populist. Javier Milei definitely campaigned against the establishment and the elite, so he […]


  3. […] most important election of 2023 took place in Argentina, where that nation’s voters elected the libertarian candidate, Javier Milei, as their new […]


  4. […] world’s most sensible political leader is President Javier Milei of […]


  5. […] the same question was asked today, the easy answer would be Javier Milei of Argentina, who just gave this astounding speech to the World Economic […]


  6. […] policy in Argentina – Electing a genuine libertarian in a very statist country was miraculous. But that was the easy part. He can do some pro-market […]


  7. […] election of the year took place in the long-suffering nation of Argentina, which amazingly elected a hard-core libertarian in its presidential […]


  8. […] was an absurd depiction. Milei is an out-of-the-closet libertarian who ran – and won – on a platform of radical (and necessary) ideas such as slashing the public sector and […]


  9. […] and Lucía Cholakian Herrera, want readers to think that the country’s just-inaugurated libertarian president, Javier Milei, is responsible for rising […]


  10. […] that libertarian candidate, Javier Milei, then shocked the world by winning the presidency last […]


  11. […] something shocking has happened. A libertarian, Javier Milei, was just elected president and he campaigned on a platform of dramatic pro-market […]


  12. Ecuador was forced into dollars back when Clinton replaced Holy War Bush. Nobody mentions THAT as a success story. US exporting of Hoover-Anslinger prohibitionism was what wrecked South American economies and brought hyperinflation in the first place, but mentioning that is thoughtcrime. You can’t ban production and trade and eat it too.


  13. The Nolan chart added a force dimension to the unidimensional monofilament. This differentiator was rabidly attacked in American Scientist, of all places! Socialists of both looter flavors regard Nolan charts and the mention of force as a violation of their settled Venn diagram containing only looters and pickpockets. See below.


  14. Austin Peterson and girl-bullier Milei are both admitted anarchists cross-dressing as libertarians. Still, this voter reaction to a Taggart-Tunnel looter prohibitionist economic collapse makes more sense than switching to the other half of the same entrenched looter Kleptocracy. It took 50 years for the original LP demonstration of a viable third option to finally sink in. We should expect nothing less than impostors, infiltators and Bokononist saboteurs, desperate to derail the original platform.


  15. Milei: ”They (china) will be business partners with the private sector” youtube.com Z37JQNrthbQ August 2023


  16. Milei: ”They (china) will be business partners with the private sector” youtube.com Z37JQNrthbQ aug2023


  17. on November 21, 2023 at 11:55 am John Michael Wagner

    Chuck,
    Most labels and categorizations fall short of 100% accurately describing reality, because reality is much more complex. However, in today’s America, using the typical left-right divide, I’d say libertarianism does belong more on the right than on the left. Yes, the right is imperfect in supporting liberty. But the left is even worse.

    Or, because this really boils down to politics, I like to say Republicans are 50% bad and Democrats are 90% bad. Both are bad, but Republicans are usually less bad.


  18. Both the Washington Post article and the New York Times article made the mistake of labeling libertarians as being right or far-right. Libertarians are neither left nor right and that confuses the hell out of media types.


  19. […] of populism, according to the left), otherwise known as “bad luck.” How bad was it? Dan Mitchell has the […]


  20. […] A Libertarian Landslide in Argentina […]


  21. The brief uptick in the ranking chart in the 1990’s also correlates to the last time Argentina pegged its currency to the dollar.


  22. It is nice to read good news for a change.


  23. Dan- you need to get on a plane for Argentina! He can’t do it alone!



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