The Argentine Flag | AP 
World

Argentina gets first 15 billion USD from IMF to stabilise economy 

The peso plunged to a record low this month, and since the start of the year, the currency has dropped more than 30 per cent against the dollar.

From our online archive

BUENOS AIRES: Argentina on Friday received $15 billion, the first tranche of a $50 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund to help stabilize its fragile economy, the South American nation's central bank said.

Following a currency crisis in April and May, the IMF announced the $50 billion standby loan in early June after Latin America's third-largest economy sought help to bolster market confidence.

The peso plunged to a record low this month, and since the start of the year, the currency has dropped more than 30 per cent against the dollar.

On Wednesday the Washington-based IMF approved the $50 billion aid package. It said the first $15 billion will contribute to budget support while the $35 billion balance will be "precautionary."

The fund said that its assistance would back efforts by Buenos Aires to put public debts on a sustainable path, reduce the need for financing and tackle inflation while strengthening the central bank's independence while maintaining social spending.

Argentina has a bitter history with the global crisis lender, which many Argentines view as having imposed tough conditions that worsened economic pain 17 years ago.

The real AI story of 2026 will be found in the boring, the mundane—and in China

Sharply confrontational political landscape in 2026 likely

Census, SIR & empirical statistical portrait of India

Regional Leaders may take the centrestage

Gig workers declare protest a success, say three lakh across India took part

SCROLL FOR NEXT