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Argentina moves to nationalize pensions

President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner (UPI Photo/Ron Sachs/POOL)
President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner (UPI Photo/Ron Sachs/POOL) | License Photo

BUENOS AIRES, Nov. 21 (UPI) -- Argentina's Senate approved a measure nationalizing private pension funds to protect about $25 billion from the global financial crisis, a lawmaker said.

President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner proposed nationalizing the private pension system in October, The Washington Post reported Friday.

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Critics said the Argentine government was trying to seize control of the funds to prop up its own finances, the Post reported. Senators approved the measure on a 46 to 18 vote after 12 hours of debate.

"The private system never achieved what was needed. This project will permit us to undo a path of errors that were committed. It will be a difficult path, but a brave one," said Sen. Julio Miranda of Tucuman, who voted to approve the bill.

A nationalized pension system would even out payments, which had gone up and down depending on market fluctuations, the newspaper said.

Before the measure passed Claudio Loser, a senior fellow at the Inter-American Dialogue called the proposal "one of the most blatant acts of financial piracy in the country's recent history."

The move would "eliminate individual savings … with large funds that could be spent almost freely by the Argentine government," Loser wrote in the Latin American Adviser, a newsletter.

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