Argentina
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Argentina,
officially the Argentine Republic (Spanish:
República Argentina, Nación Argentina
(Argentine Nation) for many legal purposes), is
a South American
country, second in size on the continent to Brazil
and eighth in the world. Argentina occupies a
continental surface area of 2,766,890 km²
(1,078,000 sq mi) between the Andes mountain range
in the west and the southern Atlantic Ocean in
the east and south.
It
is bordered by Paraguay and Bolivia in the north,
Brazil and Uruguay in the northeast, and Chile
in the west and south. The country claims the
British controlled territories of the Falkland
Islands (Spanish: Islas Malvinas) and South Georgia
and the South Sandwich Islands. Argentina also
claims but does not possess 969,464 km² (374,312
sq mi) of Antarctica, known as Argentine Antarctica,
overlapping other claims made by Chile and the
United Kingdom.
When
the first Spanish conquistadors discovered the
Río de la Plata, they named the estuary
Mar Dulce ('Sweet Sea', as in a fresh water sea).
Indigenous people gave gifts of silver to the
survivors of the shipwrecked expedition, who were
led by Juan Díaz de Solís. The legend
of Sierra del Plata – a mountain rich in
silver – reached Spain around 1524, and
the name was first seen in print on a Venice map
from 1536. The source of the silver was the area
where the city of Potosí was to be founded
in 1546. An expedition that followed the trail
of the silver up the Paraná and Pilcomayo
rivers finally reached the source only to find
it already claimed by explorers who reached it
from Lima, the capital of the Viceroyalty of Peru.
The
name Argentina (from Latin argentum: silver) was
first used extensively in the 1612 book Historia
del descubrimiento, población, y conquista
del Río de la Plata (History of the discovery,
population, and conquest of the Río de
la Plata) by Ruy Díaz de Guzmán,
naming the territory Tierra Argentina (Land of
Silver). Traditionally, the British English name
for the country is "The Argentine",
but this is no longer in common use.
History
The
first signs of human presence in Argentina are
located in the Patagonia (Piedra Museo, Santa
Cruz), and date from 11,000 BC. Around 1 AD, several
maize-based civilizations developed in the Andean
region (Santa María, Huarpes, Diaguitas,
Sanavirones, among others). In 1480, the Inca
Empire under the rule of emperor Pachacutec launched
an offensive and conquered present-day northwestern
Argentina, integrating it into a region called
Collasuyu. In the northeastern area, the Guaraní
developed a culture based on yuca and sweet potato.
The central and southern areas (Pampas and Patagonia)
were dominated by nomadic cultures, unified in
the seventeenth century by the Mapuches.
European
explorers arrived in 1516. Spain established a
permanent colony on the site of Buenos Aires in
1580; the Viceroyalty of the Río de la
Plata was created in 1776. During the early part
of this period it was largely a country of Spanish
immigrants and their descendants, known as criollos,
some of them gathered in the Buenos Aires and
other cities, others living on the pampas as gauchos.
Descendants of African slaves were present in
significant numbers. Indigenous peoples inhabited
much of the rest of Argentina. In 1806 and 1807
the British Empire launched two invasions to Buenos
Aires, but the creole population repelled
both attempts. On May 25, 1810, after confirmation
of the rumors about the overthrow of King Ferdinand
VII by Napoleon, citizens of Buenos Aires took
advantage of the situation and created the First
Government Junta (May Revolution). Formal independence
from Spain was declared on July 9, 1816 in Tucumán.
In
1818, General José de San Martín
crossed the Andes to free Chile and Peru, thus
eliminating the Spanish threat. Centralist and
federalist groups (Spanish: Unitarios and Federales)
were in conflict until national unity was established
and the constitution promulgated in 1853.
Foreign
investment and immigration from Europe
led to the adoption of modern agricultural techniques.
In the 1880s, the "Conquest of the Desert"
subdued or exterminated the remaining indigenous
tribes throughout the southern Pampas and Patagonia.
From
1880 to 1916, Argentina enjoyed increasing prosperity,
prominence and became one of the top 10 richest
countries in the world, through an agricultural
export-led economy. The population of the country
swelled sevenfold. Conservative forces dominated
Argentine politics through non-democratic means
until 1916, when their traditional rivals, the
Radicals, won control of the first free-elected
government. The military forced Hipólito
Yrigoyen from power in 1930, leading to another
decade of Conservative rule. Political change
led to the presidency of Juan Perón in
1946, who tried to empower the working class and
greatly expanded the number of unionized workers.
The economy turned to more protectionist policies
and the developing of industry. The self-proclamated
Revolución Libertadora of 1955 deposed
him.
From
the 1950s to 1970s, soft military and weak civilian
administrations traded power. During those years
the economy grew strongly and poverty declined
(to less than 7% in 1975). At the same time political
violence continued to escalate, fighting against
the military government, demanding the return
of Perón from his Spanish exile. In 1973,
Perón returned to the presidency, but he
died within a year of assuming power. His third
wife Isabel, the Vice President, succeeded him
in office, but the military coup of March 24,
1976 removed her from office.
The
armed forces took power through a junta in charge
of the self-appointed National Reorganization
Process until 1983. The military government repressed
opposition and leftist groups using harsh illegal
measures (the "Dirty War"); thousands
of dissidents "disappeared", while the
SIDE cooperated with DINA and other South American
intelligence agencies, and with the CIA in Operation
Condor. Many of the military leaders that took
part in the Dirty War were trained in the U.S.-financed
School of the Americas, among them Argentine dictators
Leopoldo Galtieri and Roberto Viola. The military
dictatorship (1976-1983) greatly increased the
extent of the country's foreign debt. From that
point the economy of the country began to be controlled
more and more by the conditions imposed on it
by both its creditors and the IMF (International
Monetary Fund) with priority given to servicing
the repayment of the foreign debt. These and other
economic problems, charges of corruption, public
revulsion in the face of human rights abuses and,
finally, the country's 1982 defeat by the British
in the Falklands War discredited the Argentine
military regime.
Democracy
was restored in 1983. Raúl Alfonsín's
Radical government took steps to account for the
"disappeared", established civilian
control of the armed forces, and consolidated
democratic institutions. The members of the three
military juntas were prosecuted and sentenced
to life terms. Failure to resolve endemic economic
problems and an inability to maintain public confidence
led to Alfonsín's early departure six months
before his term was to be completed.
The
1990’s began with hyperinflation. President
Carlos Menem imposed a peso-dollar fixed exchange
rate in 1991 to stop hyperinflation and adopted
far-reaching market-based policies, dismantling
protectionist barriers and business regulations,
and implementing a privatization program. These
reforms contributed to significant increases in
investment and growth with stable prices through
most of the 1990s. However, the peso was tied
to the dollar at an artificially high rate that
could only be maintained by flooding the market
with dollars. As a result the foreign debt increased
enormously and state companies and services were
privatized. The total opening up of the market
to foreign goods, which up until then were produced
locally, resulted in the collapse of local industry.
So while part of the population was saving in
dollars, traveling overseas, and purchasing imported
and luxury goods cheaply, the rest of the population
was experiencing an increase in both poverty and
unemployment. The IMF and the world economists
praised the liberalization of the Argentine market,
and the country was presented as a “model
student”. Toward the end of the 1990s, large
fiscal deficits and overvaluation of the pegged
peso caused a gradual slide into economic crisis.
In 1998 a period of profound economic recession
began. This was a direct result of the economic
measures which dominated the decade of the 90’s
and which produced a false sense of stability
and well being. By the end of his term in 1999,
these accumulating problems and perceived corruption
had made Menem unpopular.
The
Menem and de la Rúa administrations faced
diminished competitiveness in exports, massive
imports which damaged national industry and reduced
employment, chronic fiscal and trade deficits,
and the contagion of several economic crises.
Unemployment reached as high as 25% of the economically
active population, and another 15% had only part-time
work. The Asian financial crisis in 1998 precipitated
an outflow of capital that mushroomed into a recession,
and culminated in economic crisis in November
of 2001. The governing coalition was forced to
undertake a series of measures including the freezing
of bank accounts. This was done to halt the flow
of capital out of the country and to stem the
growing debt crisis. However a climate of popular
discontent was unleashed as a result. On the 20th
of December 2001 Argentina was thrown into its
worst institutional and economic crisis for several
decades. There were violent street protests, which
brought about clashes with the police and resulted
in several fatalities. The increasingly chaotic
climate, amidst bloody riots, finally resulted
in the resignation of President de la Rúa.
The economic crisis accentuated the people’s
lack of trust in their politicians. During this
time street protests were accompanied by the cry
“they all should go.” The "they"
referred to the politicians, especially those
involved in many reported acts of corruption.
They were also accused of dealing fraudulently
with public goods and money, without any judicial
sanctions in place to curb the corruption.
In
two weeks, several presidents followed in quick
succession, culminating in Eduardo Duhalde's being
appointed interim President of Argentina by the
Legislative Assembly on 2 January 2002. Argentina
defaulted on its international debt obligations.
The peso's near eleven year-old linkage to the
United States dollar was abandoned, resulting
in major depreciation of the peso and a spike
in inflation.
With
a more competitive and flexible exchange rate,
the country implemented new policies based on
re-industrialization, import substitution, increased
exports, and consistent fiscal and trade surpluses.
By the end of 2002 the economy began to stabilize,
mainly thanks to the soybean and other cereals'
boom and dirty flotation of the exchange rates.
In 2003, Néstor Kirchner was elected president.
During Kirchner's presidency, Argentina restructured
its defaulted debt with a steep discount (about
66 percent) on most bonds, paid off outstanding
debts with the International Monetary Fund, renegotiated
contracts with utilities, and nationalized some
previously privatized enterprises. Currently,
Argentina is enjoying a period of high economic
growth and political stability. In 2007 Néstor
Kirchner declined to run for reelection. His wife
and senator from Buenos Aires, Cristina Fernández
de Kirchner, was elected president, becoming the
first woman to be elected president of Argentina.
She won with almost 44 percent of the vote, which
is the highest percentage in the history of the
country since democracy was restored in 1983,
though the election process was irregular since
there was systemic dissapareance of opposition
ballots that forced some people to vote someone
they did not intend to; other irregularities included
denounced delays in campaign fund delivery by
opposition parties, and the defacto postulation
of Cristina as the party's candidate. Also in
2007, Center-left Fabiana Ríos (ARI) became
the first woman to be elected governor of Tierra
del Fuego and first elected female governor in
Argentina's history. (Credit:
Wikipedia).
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