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Description
In the 1990s, few countries were more lionized than Argentina for its efforts to join the club of wealthy nations. Argentina’s policies drew enthusiastic applause from the IMF, the World Bank and Wall Street. But the club has a disturbing propensity to turn its back on arrivistes and cast them out. That was what happened in 2001, when Argentina suffered one of the most spectacular crashes in modern history. With it came appalling social and political chaos, a collaspe of the peso, and a wrenching downturn that threw millions into poverty and left nearly one quarter of the workforce unemployed. Paul Blustein, whose book about the IMF, The Chastening, was called gripping, often frightening by The Economist and lauded by The Wall Street Journal as a superbly reported and skillfully woven story, now gets right inside Argentina’s rise and fall in a dramatic account based on hundreds of interviews with top policymakers and financial market players as well as reams of internal documents. He shows how the IMF turned a blind eye to the vulnerabilities of its star pupil, and exposes the conduct of global financial market players in Argentina as redolent of the scandals-like those at Enron, WorldCom and Global Crossing- that rocked Wall Street in recent years. By going behind the scenes of Argentina’s debacle, Blustein shows with unmistakable clarity how sadly elusive the path of hope and progress remains to the great bulk of humanity still mired in poverty and underdevelopment.
About the Author
Paul Blustein, a staff writer at the Washington Post, has covered business and economic issues for more than twenty-five years. He has also worked at Forbes Magazine and the Wall Street Journal. His work has won several prizes, including business journalism's most prestigious, the Gerald Loeb Award.
“[Blustein] is at his best telling the story of the various IMF bailouts of Argentina, the internal arguments about whether to do it, and the mission in which the IMF finally said no… Much of the value of Blustein’s account is in showing how slow the institutions of global capitalism were in ringing the alarm.”
— The Seattle Times and Post-Intelligencer
“An entertaining, insightful account of how in the space of a few years Argentina went from emerging market poster child to problem child in the family of nations… Undoubtedly the greatest strength of this book is what it reveals about the inner workings of the IMF.”
— The Buenos Aires Herald
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