Exports should pick up in the second half and industry should benefit from more import substitution and easier credit.
The official forecast is that inflation will fall to 12% this year, the peso will devalue by 8%, and unemployment will hold at 17.5%.
The IMF's main preoccupation, the fiscal deficit, will be 2% of GDP, while public sector debt will be worth 107% of GDP by the end of the year.
The revival in exports should mean that the country will manage a current account surplus of 4% of GDP due to a 9% rise in exports and a 9% fall in imports. This should mean that the country will be able to make its debt payments when they fall due.
Another encouraging piece of news is the pick-up in bank deposits. These now stand at US$1.4bn, having rising by US$255m in the first fortnight of July.
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