The U.S. Supreme Court surprised the
financial world Monday by turning down Argentina’s request to hear the
bankrupt South American nation’s case against its hedge fund creditors.
Whereas many observers expected the Supreme Court to give Argentina more
time by referring the case to the U.S. solicitor general for review,
today’s ruling effectively put an end to years of Argentine posturing
and bluster. Her judicial options now exhausted, Argentina — a country
notorious for decades for unwillingness to properly service the massive
debts she has incurred as a result of several generations of financial
profligacy — faces two options: pay her creditors or default once again
on her obligations.
Argentina’s latest financial crisis is the long-delayed consequence
of her infamous default in 2001-2002. Then, her options for repayment
exhausted, Argentina simply defaulted on her debt, which led to economic
collapse and several years of crime, poverty, and civil unrest severe
even by Argentine standards. Eventually, Argentina worked out an
agreement with many of her creditors, who agreed to accept service of
debts at a steep discount. But not all holders of Argentine debt were
willing to take a haircut. After the default, a significant portion of
the debt was sold to international hedge funds, who have been hounding
and harassing Argentina ever since to force the deadbeat nation to pay
up, in full.
Argentina’s vitriolic populist president Cristina Kirchner (shown)
has been fulminating for years against allegedly wicked plutocrats
(“vultures,” she calls them, in the best tradition of over-the-top Latin
American political rhetoric) who have the temerity to require Argentina
to pay her debts. Since Argentina, unlike Greece and other failed EU
economies, cannot rely on stronger regional economies, such as Brazil or
Chile, to bail her out of her misery, the unlucky citizens of the
republic on the River Plate are staring into the abyss for the second
time in little more than a decade. Since Argentina’s addiction to a
fiat-currency-and-debt-driven economy has enriched the few at the
expense off the many, there is little political support for paying the
American-based hedge funds their due. So desperate have been Argentina’s
legal and financial contortions to avoid repayment that, at one
juncture, an Argentine military vessel was actually impounded in Ghana
at the behest of her creditors.
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