Colgate-PalmoliveEssay Preview: Colgate-PalmoliveReport this essayEconomicArgentina has several natural resources they benefit from, they have a high population, and they are export oriented in the agricultural sector, which has helped them to be diverse in their industrial base. Argentina is one of the wealthiest countries. Argentina has suffered during the 20th century; this has been a recurring crisis that has been persistent for the fiscal and the current account deficits, high inflation, mounting external debts and capital flight.
In 2001, there was a severe depression in Argentina that affected the public and external indebtedness. This was the most serious economic, social, and political crisis in the countrys disturbance history. At the time, there was an Interim President, his name was Adolfo Rodriguez SAA, and he declared default. This was the largest in the city, for the governments foreign debt in December of that year, and abruptly resigned only a few days after taking office. In 2002, Adolfo Rodriguezs successor, Eduardo Duhalde announced an end to the pesos 1 to 1 to the US dollar.
After Argentina took hold to Eduardo Dehualds change, the economy bottomed out that year, with real GDP 18% smaller than in 1998 and almost 60% of Argentines under the poverty line. Real GDP rebounded to grow by an average 9% annually over the past five years, taking advantage of the industrial capacity and labor, this debt restructuring and reduced debt burden, excellent international financial conditions, and expansionary monetary and fiscal policies.
In 2006, inflation, reached double-digit levels. The government and The President Nestor Kirchner responded with “voluntary” price agreements with businesses, as well as export taxes and restraints. Multi-year price freezes on electricity and natural gas rates for residential users stoked consumption and kept private investment away, leading to restrictions on industrial use and blackouts in 2007.
PoliticalWith all of this in mind, Argentinas political arena, Coalicion Civica; Front for Victory; Interbloque Federal (a broad coalition of approximately 12 parties including PRO); Justicialist Front or FJ; Justicialist Party or PJ (Peronist umbrella political organization); Radical Civic Union or UCR [Gerardo MORALES]; Republican Proposal or PRO (including Federal Recreate Movement or RECREAR [Ricardo LOPEZ MURPHY] and Commitment for Change or CPC [Mauricio MACRI]); Socialist Party or PS [Ruben GIUSTINIANI]; Union For All [Patricia BULLRICH]; several provincial parties. Argentine Association of Pharmaceutical Labs (CILFA); Argentine Industrial Union (manufacturers association); Argentine Rural Confederation or CRA (small to medium landowners association); Argentine Rural Society (large landowners association); Central of Argentine Workers or CTA (a radical union for employed and unemployed
; the International Confederation of Unemployed Workers, or IUC,); Unions of Working Workers in Argentine (IUW), International Unions of Workers’ and Social Workers (ITW), International Unions of Workers’/Organized Workers/CPS (United Labor Organization of the United Mine Workers or OWW or PAW or TIO or TIPP or COSAT or POCB or ALSO or UNUSP) (the latter with no membership or support for political parties); the Argentine Workers’ Organization for Labor (ALSO), the Workers Social Alliance (WW) which is another radical leftist movement, the Unions of Working Workers (UTW), which is considered to be a social justice organization of working people). It could be a group of a union, not a movement, but an organization, as in Venezuela, where only a single group is a party. It represents the right of unions to exist at all, a right that has been rejected by socialism, where the workers are the only representatives of a single class, like unions. This makes the right-wing parties in Argentina the second main opposition party. The party system is in accordance with the constitution, and, therefore, the main political class is the military party or the trade union. The military dictatorship does not allow parties to form groups, while the trade unions for trade unions have an active role in all sectors of a social organization. (a) Political parties which are not part of the military class have limited role, but nevertheless have influence, in the interests of the party, since only the military government and the military courts are a legal and political entity. This could result in a major military crackdown and the imposition of severe austerity measures in the next two years. This is also supported by the right-wing party in the Assembly of the Workers (OCCL), with which the military was founded in 1974 (see below). In the elections of 1989, it formed one of the first two factions in the political parties. The coalition that produced him, the IUC, was comprised of many trade unionism or trade unions. In 1989, when we had elected him president for the next fifteen years, the IUC joined with the two other trade unions and their members, to create a national government by means of national legislation. In the previous elections, the IUC was split between the trade unions and the military, but remained in an alliance with the military. The trade unions in this period also had a role in politics, in the right of unions to lead themselves to power and the party, even though they were of relatively small size in the region. In 1988, the trade union congress of Buenos Aires and other international organisations included members of the trade unions involved in the military dictatorship. The military dictatorship of 1991 established a law with strict rules and no amendments to follow, limiting its power which included the right to run the state. Although the law has not been ratified by the electorate, it had the backing of most of the labor force in Argentina. The military dictatorship of 2011, which started in 2006 by imposing extreme austerity measures, was a military dictatorship under which two sectors were cut, the middle class replaced with government salaries rose slightly, and, with the military, the number of military officers and the number of jobs disappeared, but even with this radical expansion, the military continued to use military force against the labor movement, mainly on issues that relate to industrial policy.[1] The military has also fought a long war against labor for some 15 years, but
; the International Confederation of Unemployed Workers, or IUC,); Unions of Working Workers in Argentine (IUW), International Unions of Workers’ and Social Workers (ITW), International Unions of Workers’/Organized Workers/CPS (United Labor Organization of the United Mine Workers or OWW or PAW or TIO or TIPP or COSAT or POCB or ALSO or UNUSP) (the latter with no membership or support for political parties); the Argentine Workers’ Organization for Labor (ALSO), the Workers Social Alliance (WW) which is another radical leftist movement, the Unions of Working Workers (UTW), which is considered to be a social justice organization of working people). It could be a group of a union, not a movement, but an organization, as in Venezuela, where only a single group is a party. It represents the right of unions to exist at all, a right that has been rejected by socialism, where the workers are the only representatives of a single class, like unions. This makes the right-wing parties in Argentina the second main opposition party. The party system is in accordance with the constitution, and, therefore, the main political class is the military party or the trade union. The military dictatorship does not allow parties to form groups, while the trade unions for trade unions have an active role in all sectors of a social organization. (a) Political parties which are not part of the military class have limited role, but nevertheless have influence, in the interests of the party, since only the military government and the military courts are a legal and political entity. This could result in a major military crackdown and the imposition of severe austerity measures in the next two years. This is also supported by the right-wing party in the Assembly of the Workers (OCCL), with which the military was founded in 1974 (see below). In the elections of 1989, it formed one of the first two factions in the political parties. The coalition that produced him, the IUC, was comprised of many trade unionism or trade unions. In 1989, when we had elected him president for the next fifteen years, the IUC joined with the two other trade unions and their members, to create a national government by means of national legislation. In the previous elections, the IUC was split between the trade unions and the military, but remained in an alliance with the military. The trade unions in this period also had a role in politics, in the right of unions to lead themselves to power and the party, even though they were of relatively small size in the region. In 1988, the trade union congress of Buenos Aires and other international organisations included members of the trade unions involved in the military dictatorship. The military dictatorship of 1991 established a law with strict rules and no amendments to follow, limiting its power which included the right to run the state. Although the law has not been ratified by the electorate, it had the backing of most of the labor force in Argentina. The military dictatorship of 2011, which started in 2006 by imposing extreme austerity measures, was a military dictatorship under which two sectors were cut, the middle class replaced with government salaries rose slightly, and, with the military, the number of military officers and the number of jobs disappeared, but even with this radical expansion, the military continued to use military force against the labor movement, mainly on issues that relate to industrial policy.[1] The military has also fought a long war against labor for some 15 years, but