This essay examines the application of neoliberal economic policies in Argentina during the 1990s and their role in precipitating the severe crisis of 2001. It outlines the broader model of the decade, explores its specific implementation through the Convertibility regime, analyses the impact of global financial shocks, and describes the domestic collapse. The discussion draws on established historical accounts to evaluate the risks of heavy reliance on external markets and fixed exchange regimes.
Neoliberalism and the Economic Model of the 1990s
Neoliberalism in the 1990s centred on market liberalisation, privatisation of state enterprises, deregulation and the reduction of trade barriers. Governments across Latin America adopted these measures, often under the influence of the Washington Consensus, in response to the debt crisis of the 1980s. Policymakers argued that privatising inefficient public companies would improve productivity and that opening borders would attract foreign investment and modern technology. The expectation was that competition from imported goods would force domestic producers to become more efficient.
The Argentine Convertibility Plan
In Argentina the neoliberal model was implemented most rigorously through the Convertibility Plan introduced in 1991 by Economy Minister Domingo Cavallo. The peso was pegged at parity with the US dollar, and the central bank was required to hold foreign reserves equal to the monetary base. At first the policy delivered rapid results: hyperinflation ended, price stability returned and foreign capital inflows resumed. Consumers gained access to cheaper imported goods, creating an initial sense of prosperity. However, the fixed exchange rate quickly produced an overvalued currency. Argentine manufacturers faced intense competition from foreign products without corresponding productivity gains. Local factories reduced output or closed, unemployment rose and the trade deficit widened. The regime therefore achieved short-term macroeconomic stability at the cost of long-term industrial decline.
Exposure to Global Financial Instability
Fixed-exchange regimes left emerging economies vulnerable to sudden reversals of capital flows. When Russia defaulted in 1998 and Brazil devalued its currency in 1999, investor confidence in the region deteriorated. Argentina, still bound by convertibility, could not adjust its exchange rate. Capital began to exit, reserves fell and the government was forced to borrow at increasingly punitive interest rates. The country’s dependence on external financing left it without adequate policy tools once global liquidity tightened. As a result, domestic recession deepened while external debt continued to grow.
The Collapse of 2001 and the Corralito
By late 2001 the banking system faced a run on deposits. On 1 December the government imposed the “corralito”, limiting cash withdrawals to a small weekly amount. The measure triggered widespread protests, looting and political instability. Five presidents held office within two weeks. In January 2002 convertibility was abandoned, the peso was devalued sharply and Argentina defaulted on its external debt. The crisis produced a deep contraction, soaring unemployment and a loss of savings for many citizens.
Conclusion
The Argentine experience illustrates the dangers of adopting a rigid exchange-rate anchor and complete openness to international capital without sufficient domestic buffers. While neoliberal reforms initially curbed inflation, they also eroded industrial capacity and exposed the economy to external shocks. The 2001 crisis therefore serves as a reminder that policy frameworks must retain flexibility to absorb global volatility rather than rely solely on market discipline and fixed rules.
References
- Blustein, P. (2005) And the Money Went Wild: The Inside Story of the Argentine Crisis. Washington: PublicAffairs.
- Rock, D. (2002) Argentina 1516-2000: From Spanish Colonization to the Present. Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Stiglitz, J. E. (2002) Globalization and Its Discontents. New York: W. W. Norton.

