Argentina makes US$390-million interest payment to IMF
Argentina made a payment of US$390 million Monday to the International Monetary Fund for interest on a US$44-billion loan it is seeking to renegotiate, the government said.
Argentina made a payment of US$390 million Monday to the International Monetary Fund for interest on a US$44-billion loan it is seeking to renegotiate, the government said.
The amount was the final interest payment for 2021, the Economy Ministry told AFP.
So far this year, Argentina has paid US$1.9-billion down-payment on the loan, as well as US$1.3 billion in interest.
It must pay another US$1.9 billion by December.
Argentina has received US$44 billion of a US$57-billion loan from the IMF arranged under former president Mauricio Macri.
After taking office, his successor Alberto Fernández refused to accept the rest of the loan.
Argentina, the IMF's biggest debtor, has been in recession since 2018 and is seeking to renegotiate the loan.
If no agreement is reached, it will have to pay the Fund about US$19.3 billion in 2022, another US$19.5 billion in 2023 and US$4.9 billion in 2024, according to government estimates.
– TIMES/AFP
related news
-
Will April showers bring May flowers?
-
Milei’s Macri mirror
-
When the machines stop working
-
Stories that caught our eye: April 25 to May 1
-
The great debate
-
Evo Morales vows no surrender in bid to reclaim Bolivian presidency
-
Chinese business interests await gesture from Milei towards Xi
-
Batakis: IMF betting on Milei because his failure would also be theirs
-
Argentina eliminates export duties for thousands of manufactured goods
-
Milei sets end of inflation timeline amid union unrest