CEPR has been examining economic changes in Argentina since the early 2000s, especially how IMF policies have affected the economy and how Argentina was able to recover after its severe 1998–2002 recession.
CEPR has been examining economic changes in Argentina since the early 2000s, especially how IMF policies have affected the economy and how Argentina was able to recover after its severe 1998–2002 recession.
· Op-Ed/Commentary
ArgentinaHondurasLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld Independent Latin America Forms Its Own OrganizationMark Weisbrot / February 25, 2010
· Op-Ed/Commentary
ArgentinaGlobalization and TradeGrowthLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld Central Bank Independence: From Whom?Mark Weisbrot / February 15, 2010
· Op-Ed/Commentary
ArgentinaEuropeGlobalization and TradeGrowthLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld A New Role For the IMF?Mark Weisbrot / October 08, 2009
· Op-Ed/Commentary
ArgentinaLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld Vulture Funds Lobby Against Argentina, Trying To Use the U.S. Congress In Public Relations CampaignMark Weisbrot / June 04, 2009
· report
ArgentinaGlobalization and TradeGrowthInternational Monetary FundLatin America and the CaribbeanMexicoVenezuelaWorld Troubled Assets: The IMF’s Latest Projections for Economic Growth in the Western HemisphereDavid Rosnick / April 28, 2009
· Op-Ed/Commentary
ArgentinaLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld Obama Should Make A Clean Break With the Past on Latin AmericaMark Weisbrot / December 02, 2008
· report
ArgentinaLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld Argentina: The Crisis That Isn'tCEPR / October 03, 2008
· Op-Ed/Commentary
ArgentinaGlobalization and TradeGrowthLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld The IMF’s Historic Transition: Is Less Better?Mark Weisbrot / April 28, 2008
· Op-Ed/Commentary
ArgentinaLatin America and the CaribbeanVenezuelaWorld "Suitcase Scandal" Is Another U.S. Foreign Policy BlunderMark Weisbrot / January 10, 2008
· report
ArgentinaLatin America and the CaribbeanWorkersWorld The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly: Job Quality in the United States over the Three Most Recent Business CyclesAlan BarberJohn Schmitt / November 05, 2007