"Whenever I visit a country they al-ways say...here it is different," Ru-diger Dornbusch, a legendary economist, once told his students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). "Well, it never is." For most countries, his words are a warning. For Argentina, they are a comfort. The country has lurched from one economic crisis to another, culminating in the recent reimposition of currency controls and rescheduling of debts. Its voters, who also lurch from populists to liberals and back, look poised to oust Mauricio Macri's liberal government in October in favour of a populist duo, Alberto Fernandez and Cris-tina Fernandez de Kirchner, the former president. It is therefore easy to believe that Argentina is different. Just not in a good way.
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