Is Javier Milei Actually Improving Argentina?
Two Argentine pundits debate the success of Javier Milei.
Two Argentine pundits debate the success of Javier Milei.
But local free market economists think further currency and labor reforms will get the Argentine economy recovering faster
AFIP is an "unnecessary bureaucracy" that stifles economic freedom, says Milei's government.
A free market for housing is one that benefits both renters and landlords.
Javier Milei’s repeal of restrictive rent control laws increased housing supply and stabilized prices.
Javier Milei’s plan to let nonprofit teams convert to for-profit entities may inject capital into a struggling soccer league.
Argentina's self-proclaimed libertarian president touts a crime-fighting plan that sounds like Minority Report.
With his initial reforms now in effect, the Argentine president announced the "second phase" of his war against inflation and the deficit.
Plus: Catholic hospitals may be forced to provide euthanasia, Milei's accomplishments in Argentina, migrant crisis near the Canary Islands, and more...
The Cato Institute's Ian Vasquez recently organized a conference in Argentina featuring President Javier Milei. He gives an update on the presidency.
We could grow our way out of our debt burden if politicians would limit spending increases to just below America's average yearly economic growth. But they won't even do that.
...as protests outside Congress escalate into violence.
The president has tried to shift blame for inflation, interest rate hikes, and an overall decimation of consumers' purchasing power.
Prosecutors say the Buenos Aires Yoga School was a sex trafficking cult, but the alleged victims say this isn't true.
The move is part of the president's ongoing strategy to cut public spending and reduce the national deficit.
A formal partnership between Argentina and El Salvador could signal a major shift in Latin America's approach to digital assets.
Plus: Boobs in the portal, Michelin-starred tacos, Argentine labor laws, Gavin Newsom's replacement, and more...
With only a minority of support in Congress, the president had to make concessions to secure the passage of his sweeping reform bill.
Argentine President Javier Milei and Tesla CEO Elon Musk met for the first time in Austin, Texas, where they "agreed on the need for free markets."
In a recent interview, the Argentine president said he would have ended up in prison if he dollarized the economy.
The cuts are part of the president's broader strategy to achieve fiscal balance at any cost.
The new Argentine president is popular with American libertarians, but his record at home looks increasingly populist and authoritarian.
The president who vowed to cut government spending rescinds the 48 percent pay raise he gave himself.
"It is immoral that in a poor country like ours," the Argentine president said, "the government spends the people's money to buy the will of journalists."
President Javier Milei's adversaries are wealthy Argentines who have benefited from government largesse.
Decades of protectionism have led to the film industry’s decline, but a free market can make it bloom.
In exchange, the libertarian president had to scale back some of his free-market ambitions.
The new libertarian president believes in free markets and the rule of law. When people have those things, prosperity happens.
Milei's swift action intended to transform Argentina's floundering economy provoked the country's biggest labor union to call tens of thousands to protest in Buenos Aires against his libertarian agenda.
Plus: TED's "genocide apologists," California's speed limits, NYPD's inability to handle road blockages, and more...
Marcos Falcone discusses Argentine President Javier Milei's fiery speech at the World Economic Forum's annual conference in Davos on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
His speech in Davos challenged the growing worldwide trend of increased government involvement in economic affairs.
Plus: Chatbots vs. suicidal ideation, Margot Robbie vs. the patriarchy, New York City vs. parents, and more...
Republican Presidential Nomination
Plus: Javier Milei’s powerful speech on economic prosperity in Davos
Speaking at the Davos conference, the Argentine president said the key to prosperity lies in free market ideals and capitalism.
The government says it's about sovereignty. It might be about oil, too.
The president says the changes are needed to "avoid disaster."
If passed, the new libertarian president's omnibus bill of reforms could help Argentina reverse decades of government failure.
Argentina is opening domestic air travel to foreign airlines for the first time. The same trick has worked wonders for Europe.
Milei's critics have argued the government's measures are a "criminalization of the right to protest," but a closer look shows that those concerns are somewhat exaggerated.
The self-described anarcho-capitalist president devalued the peso, halved government ministries, and announced a series of spending cuts.
"Just as the fall of the Berlin Wall marked the end of a tragic era for the world," he said, "these elections have marked the turning point in our history."
Plus: Send your questions for the editors to roundtable@reason.com ahead of this week’s special webathon episode!
Three lessons from the Austrian economist Murray Rothbard on how American libertarians might think about Milei's Argentina ascension.
Sohrab Ahmari denounces Argentina's new president as a faux populist. Good for Milei.
Plus: A listener asks the editors about libertarians and "reflexive contrarianism."
Once you get past the aesthetics, the similarities between Milei and MAGA mostly vanish.
Plus: OpenAI apocalypse, New York's problematic pie, Backpage trial concludes, and more...
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