Well the one area that AI sometimes doesn't too well is nuanced discussions. Millei definitely has had some wins and was probably the best man to win the election given the other alternatives on the table. My issue is more with how he branded himself, what he promised to deliver and what he has actually delivered. Here are a few things that Ai probably missed but are worthy of consideration:
1. Since he took over about two years ago, money supply (M2) has exploded by about 114%
2. Between $40b - $80b worth of gvt debt is being rolled over with maturities that are less than a year, meaning less money for productive businesses but to servicing the interest payments. A huge reason why inflation is still running hot despite all the benefits AI pointed out above
3. His failure to close the central bank is the reason why the two problems above persist and will likely continue to persist
4. Argentina today, after the recent IMF bailout which Millei begged for, now has the highest outstand debt to the IMF in IMF history. Debt that everyone knows can never be repaid, esp when you consider that Argentina alone makes up 40% of the IMF's lending portfolio. Not to mention an additional $42B that was borrowed from intl lenders like the WB, under Millei
5. GDP growth is an easy metric to manipulate in the short term when you are printing like crazy, which is exactly what Millei is doing. That's to say nothing of how useless a metric GDP is for measuring economic growth objectively
I could go on, the point is that he isn't what I thought he was. Chainsaw theatrics and economic realities are two different worlds