11/13/2020 4:45 PM
Clarín.com
Economy
Updated 11/13/2020 4:46 PM
In the midst of tensions between the Ministry of Economy and the Central Bank, and after the journalist Marcelo Bonelli published in
Clarín
that the minister had requested the head of the head of the monetary entity, Martín Guzmán and Miguel Ángel Pesce
took a photo to be aligned.
"Today we met with the president of the Central Bank Miguel Pesce, to
coordinate the lines of work
, prior to the meeting with the IMF," Guzmán wrote on his Twitter account, in a brief text that accompanied the image of both officials in the closing of a week full of ups and downs of the dollar, with a change in the retirement formula that the opposition accuses of being an adjustment and with the mission of the IMF on Argentine soil.
Thus, while in the corridors it is an open secret that their relationship would not be the idea, they decided to put those differences aside, at least for the photo.
"The economic team
works together under the leadership of President Alberto Fernández
with a common goal: for Argentina to grow and stabilize," said Guzmán.
The Guzmán-Pesce postcard comes after the journalist Marcelo Bonelli published today in his usual panorama of Fridays in Clarín that the Minister of Economy had asked for "the head" of the head of the BCRA.
Today we met with the president of the Central Bank Miguel Pesce, to coordinate the lines of work, prior to the meeting with the IMF.
The economic team works together under the leadership of President @alferdez with a common goal: for Argentina to grow and stabilize.
pic.twitter.com/FhV9iZhOkr
- Martín Guzmán (@Martin_M_Guzman) November 13, 2020
"Martín Guzmán asked for the head of Miguel Pesce, after another new brawl between the Central Bank and the Palacio de Hacienda. Guzmán claimed in Olivos all the decision-making power of exchange and monetary policy. He reacted against Pesce after the head of the monetary authority would once again discuss tenders, the bond festival and Guzmán's measures, "said Bonelli, who explained that" the minister argued that the displacement would end the fights and would unify -really- economic leadership. "
The claim was made before Alberto Fernández.
The President listened to him attentively and even understood the point, but decided to wait.
"Alberto talks about December and wants to have the agreement with the IMF closed first. The situation is kept top secret in the Casa Rosada, the Palacio de Hacienda and in the BCRA itself," the journalist completed in his Clarín column.
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