Axel Kicillof

Axel Kicillof
Minister of the Economy
Incumbent
Assumed office
18 November 2013
President Cristina Fernández de
Kirchner
Preceded by Hernán Lorenzino
Personal details
Born 25 September 1971
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Political party Justicialist Party
Other political
affiliations
Front for Victory (2003–present)
Spouse(s) Soledad Quereilhac
Alma mater University of Buenos Aires

Axel Kicillof (Spanish: [ˈaksel kisiˈlof]; born 25 September 1971) is an Argentine economist who was appointed Argentina's Minister of Economy on November 18, 2013.[1]

Described by his biographer as “the economic guru who captivated Cristina Kirchner,”[2] Kicillof was instrumental in the 2012 renationalization of the energy firm YPF.[3] It was on his advice that President Fernández de Kirchner decided not to pay holdout creditors in 2014, bringing on Argentina's second default on its sovereign debt in 13 years.

Kicillof has been a firm believer in Keynesian economics, and an avid admirer of the Kirchners since his student days when he was a member of the pro-Kirchner youth group La Cámpora and head of the radical student group TNT. A longtime professor of Economic Sciences at the University of Buenos Aires and outspoken critic of the neo-liberal policies of the Kirchners' predecessors, he is known for his unorthodox haircut and dress code, signifying his anti-establishment views.[4]

Early life and education

Kicillof is the second child of three siblings born to psychoanalyst Daniel Kicillof and psychologist Nora Barenstein, both non-practicing Ashkenazi Jews; Kicillof was raised in the neighborhood of Recoleta.[5][6] His father committed suicide when Kicillof was 22.[7]

From 1984 to 1989, Kicillof attended the Colegio Nacional de Buenos Aires. From 1990 to 1995, he studied in the Faculty of Economic Sciences at the University of Buenos Aires (UBA). He graduated magna cum laude, receiving a Degree in Economics with a focus on the public sector. He was the top student in his class of 122. From 1997 to 2005, he pursued graduate studies at UBA, receiving a Doctorate in Economics. His doctoral committee consisted of D. Heymann, P. Levín, and A. Monza, and his dissertation director was M. Teubal. His doctoral dissertation was entitled Génesis y estructura de la Teoría General de Lord Keynes (Genesis and structure of the General Theory of Lord Keynes).[8]

At university, he was a prominent student leader. He was the head of the student organization Tontos pero No Tanto (TNT) and was also a member of the Kirchnerist youth group La Cámpora, now headed by Max Kirchner. As a student leader he was “acclaimed by students like a rock star.”[7] From 1989 to 2001, he was an outspoken critic of neoliberalism in Argentina.[9][10]

Kicillof is married to Soledad Quereilhac, a professor of literature at the University of Buenos Aires and the author of a 2014 book, La imaginación científica. Ciencias ocultas y literatura fantástica en el Buenos Aires de entre-siglos (1875-1910) (The Scientific Imagination: occult sciences and fantasy literature in turn-of-the-century Buenos Aires (1875-1910)).[11] They live in the Buenos Aires neighborhood of Parque Chas and have two children.[7]

He speaks English and French fluently. His younger sister, Irene, is a psychologist and translator.[12]

Career

Academic work

Kicillof was an adjunct professor in the Faculty of Economic Sciences at UBA from 1998 to 2010.[13]

While he was a professor, Kicillof was noted for his pro-Kirchner, Marxist writings on the website of CENDA (the Center for Argentine Development). Some of these writings were later removed from the site.[14]

In 2003, Kicillof became the first Head of Practical Works and, later, regular adjunct professor of Economics II in the sociology track. He also taught economics at the Escuela Superior de Comercio Carlos Pellegrini, the Universidad Nacional de Quilmes, and the Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento.

At the postgraduate level, Kicillof was professor of economics in the masters and doctoral programs for Social Sciences at the Institute of Economic and Social Development at the Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento (UNGS-IDES). In the Latin American Social Sciences Institute (FLACSO), he was the professor of the History of Economic Thought in the masters program for Public Policy for Development with Social Inclusion. Earlier, Kicillof taught economics in the masters and doctoral programs for Political Economics with the Argentinian Economy, specializing in two subjects, the History of Economic Thought and Microeconomics and Macroeconomics, Fundamental Concepts of the Political Economy. Kicillof also taught a course entitled "Differentiation of Capital in the Field of Health" in the Faculty of Economics at the University of Buenos Aires.

Since November 2010, Kicillof has been an assistant researcher for CONICET. Between May 2008 and April 2011, he was director of the project UBACYT E017—"Argentina After the Collapse of the Exchange Rate. Continuities and Ruptures: A New Pattern of Growth?" At the Center of Studies for the Planning of Development (CEPLAD) at the Institute of Economics Research (University of Buenos Aires), he was appointed the deputy director and served from 2006 to 2010, when he obtained a license. Between 2004 and 2008, Kicillof also directed the project UBACYT E016—"Searching for a General Economic Explanation. The Development of Capitalism in Argentina, 1880–1975." From 2001 to 2003, Kicillof served as a co-director of the project UBACYT C002—"Globalization and the Agri-food System in Argentina: Towards Social Disarticulation?" Miguel Teubal also served as director. At the same time, Kicillof participated as a researcher on the E021 UBACYT project—"The Crono Structure of Capital" (director Pablo Levín).

Kicillof participated as a researcher in the project UBACYT tea 27—"Agri-food System and Regimes of Accumulation in Argentina" (director Miguel Teubal; 1998–2000), the project UBACYT—"Rotation of Capital" (director Paul Levin; 1999–2000), and the project UBACYT—"Technological Capital. Transformations in the Field of Health and Education" (director Paul Levin; 1998).

Other professional activities

Between 1990 and 1995, Kicillof worked in various advisory capacities for Comisión Naciónal de Transporte Automotor (CONTA), Tintorerías Ecológicas Dolphin System, Museo Sívori (Ad Honorem), Transportes Vidal S.A., SARTOR S.A., CALED S.A., Molinari S.A., Clínica Chirurgia Plástica, Centro Médico Bacigaluppi, Centro de Educación Terapia e Investigación en Sexualidad (CETIS), Centro de Estudios Urosexológicos y Andrológicos (CEUSA), among other clients. He was a part-time financial and information-systems manager at the Center for Diagnosis and Treatment of Allergy in 1990-95. In 1993, he was a research assistant at the Interamerican Center for Macroeconomic Studies. In 1994, he served as an adviser on the National Commission for Promotion and Development of Patagonia. In 1994-95 he held the title of Junior Economist at the Interamerican Center for Macroeconomic Studies.

In 1995-96 he served as an adviser to the Undersecretariat of Technical Administrative Coordination in the Secretariat of Social Development. In 1997, he acted as technical consultant to the Minister Secretary General of the Executive Branch in connection with the development of the government's social plan for 1998-2000. In 1997-1998, he was a consultant to the consulting firm M-Unit. In 1998 he was a project manager for AperNet. In 2009-2010, he served as Director of Financing for Aerolíneas Argentinas in connection with the formulation of its business plan for 2011-2014.[15] According to El País, he was one of several former TNT members who joined the management team of the newly nationalized airline.[9]

In 2011, Kicillof was appointed Deputy General Manager of Aerolíneas Argentinas on behalf of the Argentinian government; that same year he was appointed as a Director of Siderar, a steel firm, on behalf of the Argentinian state in return for government approval of the firm's payment of $1.5 billion in dividents.[16]

Political career

With the start of the second term of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner as President of Argentina, Axel Kicillof was appointed Secretary for economic policy and developmental planning, integrating the organizational chart of officials of the Ministry of economy and public finance of the nation, which was headed by Hernán Lorenzino. After that, on November 18, 2013, Kicillof officially became Minister of Economy.

YPF

Kicillof was instrumental in the renationalization of YPF.[17]

President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner named Kicillof to the post of Secretary (or Deputy Minister) for Economic Policy and Development Planning in December 2011.[18] He took academic leave to assume this post.[9] In this position, Kicillof oversaw the controversial 2012 nationalization of YPF, the Argentine oil company then controlled by the Spanish energy firm Repsol. It was the largest expropriation in Argentina history.[19] He justified this action as part of a needed reversal of the Argentinian economic policies of the 1990s, when the peso had been pegged to the dollar and government assets had been sold off.[7] In connection with his oversight of the seizure of YPF, Kicillof served as a director of YPF SA starting in June 2012.[18] His power at YPF was equivalent to that of an executive financial director.[10] He has been called “the ideologue of the expropriation of YPF”[10]

In April 2012, Kicillof told the Argentine Congress that the country would not pay $10 billion in compensation for YPF, as demanded by Repsol.[20] An agreement was ultimately reached with Repsol in November 2013, whereby the latter would be compensated for a 51% stake in YPF with approximately US$5 billion in 10-year corporate bonds.[21]

Minister of Economy

On November 18, 2013, President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner named Kicillof to the post of Minister of Economy. Newsweek reported in July 2014 that Kicillof enjoyed “the full backing of Argentina’s President Cristina Kirchner.”[4] Kicillof, for his part, according to his biographer, “believes Cristina Kirchner is much better than Kirchner.”[2] He is also a close friend of her son, Max.[12]

A New York Times profile of Kicillof, published on January 26, 2014, was headlined “The Influential Minister Behind Argentina’s Economic Shift.” According to the Times, Kicillof was leading “a shift in the government’s policies” as Argentina sought “to regain access to global financial markets, following the country’s default on its foreign debt in 2002.” The profile described Kicillof as “mercurial...a scholar with rockabilly-style sideburns and an aversion to business suits,” and said that he was “emerging as the face of policy shifts that are sending tremors through financial markets around the developing world” as well as “wielding greater influence over an array of areas, from Argentina’s oil industry to the government’s attempts to slow capital flight and improve relations with international creditors.” Noting that Kicillof's writings “use Marxist concepts to interpret the work of the British economist John Maynard Keynes,” the Times indicated that Kicillof was seeking to “assert greater state control over Argentina’s economy at a time when growth is slowing significantly and inflation is soaring.”[7]

El Pais reported in August 2014 that Kicillof had recently prevailed over the president of the Central Bank, Juan Carlos Fabrega, in two debates, including the question of whether to pay holdout creditors. El Pais stated that Kicillof had become “one of the most powerful officials” in the Fernández de Kirchner government and that he now not only ran the Ministry of Economy but also wielded considerable influence over other ministries and executive agencies.[9]

Vulture fund dispute

Kicillof was a central figure in the 2014 dispute with holdout bondholders, particularly with NML Capital Limited, the Cayman Islands-based vulture fund demanding US$832 million for Argentine bonds purchased for US$49 million in the secondary market in 2008. Argentine debt restructuring initiated in 2005 had been accepted by over 92% of bondholders, and these bonds had been serviced on schedule since then.[22] A 2014 ruling by a District Court Judge Thomas Griesa blocked bondholders' payments for New York-issued bonds. The ruling, which granted holdouts above-market demands, had the unprecedented effect of stopping payments to bondholders until holdout demands were met and in turn led to demands from restructured bondholders (the 92%) that their payments be released.[23]

On July 3, 2014, Newsweek reported that Argentina was “pinning its hopes on the star power and persuasive skills of its young economy minister, Axel Kicillof, to broker an 11th-hour deal.” Noting his refusal to meet with the holdout creditors, who were based in New York, Newsweek stated that “even after a U.S. judge appointed mediator Daniel Pollack to assist Argentina in forging a long-awaited settlement with its unpaid creditors, Kicillof traveled to New York in late June – but only to give an explosive speech at the U.N. lambasting the U.S. courts for driving Argentina’s economy to the brink.” Meanwhile Kicillof kept the holdout creditors “dangling.” “Even if it was not a deliberate move to tweak Argentina’s inflamed creditors,” stated Newsweek, Kicillof's trip to New York and speech at the U.N. “worked: for the past 30 days, hedge funds such as Elliott have stepped up the urgency of their rhetoric, exhorting Argentina in editorials and emails to the press to come to the negotiating table.”[4]

Later in July, Kicillof led a negotiating team that met with Pollack in New York to try to resolve the dispute with Argentina's holdout creditors. Despite hopes that government representatives would deal directly with the creditors, reported the Wall Street Journal, Kicillof said before the meeting that his delegation would not meet with them, but only with Pollack.[24]

The president of Argentina's Central Bank, Juan Carlos Fábrega, advocated paying off the holdout creditors while Kicillof argued against it.[9] It was Kicillof, reported Business Insider, who persuaded President Fernández de Kirchner to ignore the group of private bankers trying to strike a deal.[25] Kicillof had asked President Fernández de Kirchner to reject a “deal between NML and private bankers — who may have purchased NML's bonds.” He called the deal “a scam with depositors' savings.”[25]

Kicillof represented Argentina at the November 2014 G-20 Summit in Brisbane, Australia, where he called on member nations to adopt measures against vulture funds.[26] The importance of “having sovereign debt process that is orderly and foreseeable” was ultimately adopted as Point 12 in the Brisbane G-20 Summit's 21-point declaration.[27]

In a March 2015 statement, Kicillof contrasted the holdout creditors with “normal creditorsand predicted that other “vulture funds” would materialize and cause further problems for Argentina in the future. Kicillof accused Judge Thomas Griesa, who had ordered Argentina to pay the holdout creditors on their terms, of making “a legal stew” that prevented Argentina from paying other creditors.[28] Griesa's numerous rulings attempting to block bondholder payments were described by Kicillof as “absurd rulings with limited' effects.”[29] Citibank Argentina and numerous other banks both within and outside the U.S. had been improperly ordered by Griesa not to pay bondholders, and ultimately had the orders suspended or reversed by Griesa himself.[29][30][31][32]

Aerolíneas Argentinas

In June 2014, federal prosecutor Eduardo Taiano charged Kicillof with irregularities in the management of funds for the airport regulatory agency (ORSNA) while he was director of Aerolíneas Argentinas. Taiano was also investigating the airline's president, Mariano Recalde, saying that the two men had practiced systematic misappropriation. The charges were not admitted in court.[33]

Latam and IT scandals

In October 2014, Kicillof was denounced for his purported links with the Latam Securities Investment Fund (Latam). According to journalist Marcelo Bonelli, Kicillof, through his deputy, Emanuel Álvarez Agis, had ordered the Central Bank to give Latam special treatment. Because of this directive, Latam was able to purchase 200-300 million dollars in bonds directly from the Central Bank. Bonelli noted that Kicillof had close ties to Diego Marynberg of Latam, and that Álvarez Agis had close ties to UBS Investment Bank official Jorge Pepa, who handled the Latam transaction while at UBS and who, some months later, was hired by Marynberg at Latam.[34]

On March 10, 2015, La Nación reported that Kicillof had been “accused of 'occupational fraud' in his own ministry.” Some 200 students who had IT jobs in the Ministry of Economy and who were being paid through their university had published a petition online accusing Kicillof of giving them “precarious” positions and said that within a few days they would issue a court injunction against him.[35]

The Believer

Kicillof is the subject of a 2012 book, El Creyente: ¿Quien es Axel Kicillof? (The Believer: Who Is Axel Kicillof?), by Ezequiel Burgo, who has described him as “the strongest economy minister Argentina has had in a decade”.[2][7] According to Burgo, Kicillof “blindly believes in the economic policy that he transmits to the President.”[2] His dream, Burgo has said, “is to lead Argentina's economy, plan it, mold it to his liking.”[14]

Publications

Kicillof has published articles, both alone and in collaboration in a number of general publications, such as Clarin, La Nación, and Le Monde Diplomatique (Bolivian edition).[36]

Books

Scholarly articles

Kicillof has contributed many articles, both alone and in collaboration, to such economic journals as Realidad Económica, II Encontro InterNaciónal da Associação Keynesiana Brasileira, Desarrollo económico - revista de ciencias sociales, I Jornada de Economía Política de la Universidad Naciónal de General Sarmiento, I Jornadas de Economía Crítica, Capital and Class, Jornadas de Epistemología de las Ciencias Económicas, and Jornadas de Epistemología de las Ciencias Económicas.[36]

References

  1. Cristina Fernandez reshuffles cabinet and names new economic team
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "El creyente: ¿Quién es Axel Kicilloff?". Amazon.
  3. "Axel Kicillof and family". Vanity Fair. 17 April 2012. (Spanish)
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Goodman, Leah Mcgrath (Jul 30, 2014). "Axel Kicillof Is Argentina's Secret Weapon Against Default". Newsweek.
  5. Francisco Peregil. "Kicillof, la cara guapa de la economía argentina". El País (Spain).
  6. Vaz, Gabriela. "Axel Kicillof en la mira". Diario EL PAÍS de Uruguay. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 Romero, Simon; Gilbert, Johanthan (Jan 26, 2014). "The Influential Minister Behind Argentina’s Economic Shift". New York Times.
  8. "Formación Académica". Axel Kicillof CV.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 Rebossio, Alejandro (Aug 25, 2014). "Un keynesiano aupado por la crisis". El País.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Hernanz, Carlos (Apr 17, 2012). "Máximo Kirchner y Axel Kicillof se quedan con el botín millonario de YPF". El Confidencial.
  11. Soledad Quereilhac (October 10, 2013). "Ecos de lo oculto en el Buenos Aires de entre-siglos". Literatura y Lingüística.
  12. 12.0 12.1 "Axel Kicillof: el futuro de Argentina está en sus manos". Vanity Fair. June 30, 2014.
  13. "Antecedentes docentes". Axel Kicillof CV.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Lanata, Jorge (Mar 10, 2014). "Axel Kicillof, el creyente sin memoria". Clarin.
  15. "Antecedentes profesionales". Axel Kicillof CV.
  16. "Kicillof, a un paso de entrar en el directorio de Siderar". Clarin. Jul 7, 2011.
  17. "Brufau sabe que YPF ya no es suya". Página/12. 19 April 2012.
  18. 18.0 18.1 "Posición actual". Axel Kicillof CV.
  19. Di Marco, Laura (Nov 19, 2013). "Kicillof, un hijo político a imagen y semejanza de Cristina". La Nacion.
  20. Armistead, Louise (Apr 18, 2012). "Argentinian minister Axel Kicillof says country 'will not pay' $10bn compensation for YPF-Repsol". Telegraph.
  21. "Who Won Repsol’s War With Argentina?". Bloomberg News. November 27, 2013.
  22. "Talons Out: Argentina Desperately Fighting "Vulture Funds" Over Debt". Vice News. June 18, 2014.
  23. "Argentina Bondholders Keep Faith Seeking Waiver of Clause". Bloomberg. August 25, 2014.
  24. Parks, Ken (Jul 6, 2014). "Argentina Economy Minister Axel Kicillof to Lead Debt Negotiating Team". Wall Street Journal.
  25. 25.0 25.1 Lopez, Linette (Aug 4, 2014). "The Most Dangerous Politician In Latin America Has Only Become More Powerful". Business Insider.
  26. "At G20, Kicillof calls to stop vulture funds' damage power". Buenos Aires Herald. November 14, 2014.
  27. "The vulture funds and the need to strengthen sovereign debt restructuring addressed at the Summit". Télam.
  28. "Axel Kicillof: 85% of ‘me-too’ bondholders are vultures". Seprin. March 4, 2015.
  29. 29.0 29.1 "Griesa's 'absurd ruling' has 'limited' effects". Buenos Aires Herald. March 19, 2015.
  30. "New York judge allows payment to bondholders in Europe". Buenos Aires Herald. 2 August 2014.
  31. "Griesa authorizes JP Morgan to process one-off payment". Buenos Aires Herald. October 2, 2014.
  32. "Soros’ Argentina Bond Win Triggers Irrational Exuberance". Bloomberg. February 19, 2015.
  33. "Imputan al ministro de Economía de Argentina por caso de corrupción". BBC Mundo. June 5, 2014.
  34. "Crece el escándalo por una supuesta maniobra de corrupción de Axel Kicillof con bonos del BCRA". Nexofin. October 10, 2014.
  35. Kanenguiser, Martin (Mar 10, 2015). "Acusan a Kicillof de "fraude laboral"". La Nacion.
  36. 36.0 36.1 36.2 "Publicaciones". Axel Kicillof CV.
  37. "Axel Kicillof". Eudeba.
  38. "Axel Kicillof". Boutique de Libro.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Axel Kicillof.
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Axel Kicillof
Political offices
Preceded by
Hernán Lorenzino
Minister of the Economy
2013–present
Incumbent