ARTICLE

New Extension of the Emergency

The Federal Congress approved a bill extending the declaration of emergency which has been in force since 2002 as well as the powers delegated in the Executive Branch on the basis of such emergency for another two years, until the end of 2017.

October 30, 2015
New Extension of the Emergency

The Federal Congress approved the bill submitted a few weeks ago by the Executive Branch (the “Bill”), pursuant to which the Laws and Decrees that declared an emergency in the social, economic, financial, administrative, exchange matters, public contracts, sanitary, occupational and alimentary fields (the “Emergency”) would remain in force until December 31, 2017.

The Emergency was initially declared in 2002 and it has been successively extended by Congress over these years. The last extension was approved in 2013 through Law No. 26,896, due to be in force until December 31, 2015.

The Bill was submitted to Congress on September 22. It has been approved by both houses of Congress and it is now expected that the Bill will be promulgated by the Executive Branch (the “PEN”) as a new law.

Thus, the new extension of the Emergency would be in force prior to December 10, 2015, the date on which the new Administration will take office.

The main consequence of the approval by the Congress of the Bill is the extension of the Emergency and of the effects of a vast delegation of legislative powers to the PEN for a period that would go beyond the mid-term of the new Administration resulting from the 2015 presidential elections.

1. The Bill

The Bill has three articles only. The first one extends until December 31, 2017 the effects of the laws that in recent years have renewed the Emergency, and the second one provides that the new law will come into force on January 1, 2016. The third article orders that the approval of the Bill be notified to the PEN, for its promulgation.

Unlike previous laws that had approved the extension of the Emergency (such as Law No. 25,972, approved in 2004), the Bill does not authorize the PEN to declare that the Emergency has ceased, totally or partially, if it concludes that the current situation has been overcome. Interestingly, the reasons given in the Bill to justify a new extension of the Emergency are almost an exact transcript of the reasons invoked by the PEN in 2011 and 2013. As in those occasions, in its message to the Congress the PEN stated that:

  1. In light of the uncertainty under which the global economy operates and of the persistence of the crisis originated in 2008 in the international financial market (which is said to have worsened), it is necessary for the PEN to continue to hold the instruments that would allow it to preserve the levels of economic activity, consumption, investment and employment of the past ten years.
  2. The swiftness and efficacy which the PEN showed in the context of a global crisis would justify that it continues enjoying the powers granted by the laws and decrees that declared the Emergency, which would reinforce its ability to act in order to protect the nation from the widespread uncertainty and volatility that it is said to affect the global population.

In the Bill it is stated that the Argentine economy has solidified its financial system, and that the public finances and the balance of payments have been correctly managed; but the conclusion is that the complexity of the international context advise that the Emergency and the delegation of powers to the PEN be extended for another two years.

2. Subjects covered by the Emergency and main powers that will continue to be held by the PEN

a) Social, financial, administrative, financial and exchange Emergency

The situation of emergency in these areas was declared by section 1 of Public Emergency Law No. 25,561 (the “LEP”).

The LEP empowered the PEN to set forth the exchange relation between the Argentine peso and foreign currencies and to enact exchange regulations.

It also empowered the PEN to restructure the obligations affected by the modification of the exchange regime and, in relation to the measures to be adopted with respect to obligations linked to the financial system, to grant compensation to the banks.

To this effect, the PEN was authorized by the LEP to issue bonds that would be guaranteed with export duties to be applicable on hydrocarbons. The power to set forth such export duties on hydrocarbons, with that or other purposes, was extended until year 2011 by Law No. 26,217, and it has been extended again, for five more years, through Law No. 26,732.

Finally, the LEP empowered the PEN to temporarily regulate prices of components, goods and critical services, with the purpose of protecting users and consumers’ rights from possible distortions of the market or from monopoly or oligopoly actions.

b) Emergency on contracts governed by public law

The LEP set forth the conversion to Argentine pesos of the prices and tariffs fixed in the contracts entered into by the National Public Administration under public law regulations, and rendered ineffective adjustment clauses in foreign currencies and indexation clauses. The PEN was authorized to renegotiate such agreements according to certain guidelines.

In 2003, Law No. 25,790 extended the term to conduct the renegotiation and set forth additional guidelines. Thus, it was provided that the renegotiation may include certain sectors of public services or certain agreements in particular. It was also decided that the renegotiation may include partial aspects of concession or license agreements, contemplate agreement adjustments or transitory amendments, as well as periodic revisions or the adjustment of quality standards.

c) Alimentary Emergency

A national food emergency was initially declared by Decree No. 108/2002. By Decree No. 108/2002 resources were allocated from the national budget for the purchasing of goods for the attention of the highly vulnerable population’s basic needs.

d) Occupational Emergency

An occupational emergency was initially declared by Decrees No. 165/2002 and No. 565/2002. These Decrees established an economic assistance program for vulnerable sectors of the population.

e) Sanitary Emergency

A national sanitary emergency was initially declared by Decree No. 486/2002. Decree No. 486/2002 sets forth that an emergency is declared with the purpose of guaranteeing the population with access to goods and basic services necessary for the preservation of health.

Decree No. 486/2002 authorized the Ministry of Health to resort to direct contracting for agreements. It also empowers the Minister of Health to set forth control mechanisms for medicines and health supplies prices and allows direct imports of supplies in case of unjustified price increases.

3. Final comments

In 2002, Argentina was enduring one of its worst political, economic and social crises. The declaration of Emergency and the delegation of powers to the PEN, approved through the LEP and the other laws and decrees referred to above were aimed at coping with an exceptional and extraordinary situation.

More than thirteen years later, in the statement of purposes of the Bill it is acknowledged that the situation of the country has improved, but (as in 2009, 2011 and 2013) the new extension of the Emergency is justified on the grounds of the existence of an international crisis.

If the Bill is promulgated by the PEN and the Emergency remains in force until December 31, 2017, Argentina will have lived almost fifteen years under an uninterrupted Emergency (or even more, if the calculation includes Law No. 25,344, which in the year 2000 had also declared the emergency —although with a narrower scope— and was still in force when the LEP was passed).

This scenario constitutes an important challenge to the principle, expressly stated in Argentina’s Constitution and in precedents from the Federal Supreme Court, according to which emergency powers must be of a transitory, non-permanent character.

Lastly, it should be noted that if the Bill is promulgated as a Law, the new Administration resulting from the 2015 presidential elections will be vested with broad delegation of legislative powers, which may be very important in a scenario where there would not be majorities clearly defined in the Congress.