Mises Wire

Understanding Argentina’s Decades of Economic Crises

Argentina’s recent drop in monthly inflation below two percent has drawn cautious praise from many mainstream economists, who focus on the immediate success of President Javier Milei’s anti-inflation campaign. Yet, as we saw in the aftermath of his interview in Davos, many of those same analysts still question the cost of his “austerity,” the supposed risks of removing currency controls, or his refusal to monetize debt.

Given that President Milei’s policies appear to be working, and that he is himself a strong advocate of Austrian economics, I believe the best approach is to actually analyze the situation from an Austrian perspective.

Prices are Signals

Principally, what most mainstream economists fail to consider is just how damaging high inflation is to an economy, aside from “higher prices.” 

By contrast, Austrian economists like Friedrich Hayek tell us that cutting inflation is critical because it restores the essential market signals that make economic coordination possible in the first place. According to most Austrian economists, inflation is not just a rise in consumer prices; it is an artificial expansion of money and credit, which distorts information, incentives, and time preferences.

For Ludwig von Mises and Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, the structure of production and investment rests on time preference—the willingness of individuals to defer present consumption for future goods. Thus, when a government finances deficits through monetary expansion, it forces artificial credit into the economy. This pushes market interest rates below their natural level, sending a false message that society has saved more than it actually has.

Entrepreneurs—guided by these distorted signals—embark on long-term projects. Construction, infrastructure, corporate expansion all appear profitable only because capital seems cheap. These are what Austrians call malinvestments, destined to collapse when monetary reality reasserts itself.

Argentina’s decades of inflation created precisely this pattern: the illusion of prosperity financed by depreciating pesos. It produced a cycle of brief booms followed by painful busts, as each round of money printing consumed the savings base needed for real capital formation.

Milei’s refusal to print pesos to buy dollars or to finance government spending is therefore not “austerity” in the destructive sense, it is monetary honesty. By halting central bank monetization and allowing the exchange rate to float, he has reintroduced more realistic price signals into the economy. Put simply, we can think of the short-term discomfort of a stronger peso or tighter liquidity as the unavoidable detoxification after decades of monetary addiction.

In Austrian terms, Milei is allowing the market to perform its liquidation function: reallocating resources from unproductive, state-favored sectors to genuinely profitable enterprises. It’s only when relative prices are “real” again that entrepreneurs can evaluate true opportunity costs and rebuild productive capital.

Money and Societal Trust

Mainstream economists often treat inflation as if it was a neutral statistical phenomenon, an inconvenience rather than a societal calamity. But for the Austrians, inflation destroys the moral fabric of economic cooperation. When the unit of account is manipulated, contracts lose reliability, savings lose meaning, and long-term planning becomes impossible. People retreat into short-term survival, undermining the very time horizon upon which civilization depends.

In Austrian economics, sound money is not an end in itself but a moral institution; a restraint on political power and a prerequisite for social cooperation. Inflation, conversely, is the silent tax that corrodes both economic rationality and public virtue.

By at least slowing the printing press, Milei has restored the first precondition of societal trust: that the money in one’s hand tomorrow will still measure value created today.

Inflation is the Engine of Inequality

Milei’s critics frequently portray tight money as regressive, hurting the poor through job losses or reduced subsidies. But the Cantillon effect—first observed by Richard Cantillon in the 18th century—shows that inflation itself is a powerful engine of inequality.

When new money is injected, it reaches political insiders and asset-holders first: banks, exporters with privileged access to the official exchange rate, and those near government contracts. They spend before prices rise. The poor and fixed-income earners, by contrast, receive the new money last, after prices have already adjusted upward.

Argentina’s long inflationary history thus enriched the connected elite while hollowing out real wages and savings for ordinary citizens. By ending this mechanism, Milei has struck not only at inflation but at the structural injustice that inflation perpetuates.

Where Sustainable Growth Will Come From

Some commentators at Davos worried that Argentina’s growth has “plateaued” since Milei’s reforms. From an Austrian standpoint, Argentina is in the natural cleansing phase of the cycle. Artificially-stimulated sectors must shrink before authentic, sustainable investment can occur.

In the same way a forest fire clears deadwood, the contraction of inflated sectors like state-dependent industries and unprofitable exporters (sustained by cheap credit) creates space for genuine entrepreneurial discovery. Israel Kirzner emphasized that entrepreneurship flourishes only in an environment of undistorted prices, where alert individuals can discover and act on real profit opportunities.

Once the distortions of inflation fade, Argentina’s entrepreneurs can again perform this discovery role. Thus, stabilizing money precedes growth. A country cannot build prosperity on falsified capital markets. High returns on investments, innovation, and productivity all depend on an accurate cost of capital. When interest rates reflect true time preference rather than central bank manipulation, capital naturally flows to its most-valued uses instead of political ones.

Critics who lament temporary slow growth mistake the pain of correction for failure. By restoring a credible peso and running a fiscal surplus without monetary expansion, Milei is laying the institutional groundwork for long-term capital accumulation. Only after sound money returns can structural reforms like deregulation, property-rights enforcement, and entrepreneurship take hold effectively.

Conclusion

Javier Milei’s monetary policy represents an extraordinary experiment in returning to these classical principles. It is not a technocratic adjustment but a philosophical reset: replacing expedient management with rule-based discipline. 

If Milei’s policies endure, Argentina could rediscover what the Austrian School has always taught: that prosperity does not emerge from central planning or printed paper, but from the honest alignment of time, value, and human action.

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