From the land of plans to the land of chips

From the land of plans to the land of chips
From the land of plans to the land of chips
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porEditorial Team
Argentina

Argentina faces the challenge of moving from managing scarcity to generating sustained growth.

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Argentina discussed for decades how to distribute scarce resources. Subsidies, sectoral promotions, special regimes, transfers, and assistance programs dominated the economic debate. The central question was always the same: who receives what part of a wealth that grew little or did not grow at all.

This logic shaped not only economic policy but also political culture. The State became the great distributor of benefits, and the struggle to access them ended up displacing the discussion about productivity, investment, and innovation. The economy was organized around the management of scarcity.

That is why it is interesting to observe the political significance of the emergence of initiatives aimed at attracting investments in artificial intelligence, data centers, biotechnology, semiconductors, and technological infrastructure. Beyond the technical details of each project, what is relevant is that the discussion is beginning to shift from distribution to wealth creation.

This is not simply a change of sectors. This is a paradigm shift.

Modern economies do not compete solely for traditional exports or natural advantages. They also compete to attract capital, talent, knowledge, and innovation capacity. Countries that manage to insert themselves into new global technological chains not only generate higher quality jobs but also multiply their productivity and increase their long-term growth capacity.

Argentina, however, carries a structural difficulty. For years, it built a regulatory framework designed to manage protected sectors, not to compete for global investments. The consequence was an economy increasingly closed off from itself, with low technological incorporation and a growing dependence on traditional activities.

In that context, the discussion about tax incentives for large technological projects often gets trapped in a false dichotomy. It is presented as a choice between granting benefits or defending public resources. But the real question is another: Can Argentina compete for strategic investments using the same rules that condemned it to lose them for decades?

The answer is becoming increasingly evident. Technological capital is extraordinarily mobile. Projects related to artificial intelligence, data processing, digital infrastructure, or biotechnology can be located in multiple jurisdictions. Countries actively compete to attract them because they understand that behind those investments lies a significant part of future growth.

The question, then, is not whether there will be international competition for these sectors. That competition already exists. The question is whether Argentina wants to participate in it or remain on the sidelines.

Naturally, no promotional regime replaces institutions. No tax exemption indefinitely compensates for legal insecurity, macroeconomic instability, or regulatory pressure. Incentives can attract investments; institutional quality is what allows them to be retained.

That is why the challenge is broader than any specific program. The real transformation consists of building an environment where innovating is more profitable than seeking privileges, where investing is more attractive than speculating with regulations, and where value creation carries more political weight than rent capture.

That is, ultimately, the deepest change that is beginning to emerge. Argentina spent too much time discussing how to distribute a wealth it did not generate. The challenge of the coming years will be to learn how to discuss how to produce more.

The difference between both conversations is enormous. One revolves around scarcity. The other around growth.

And perhaps there lies the true political frontier of this new stage: to leave behind the country that organized its economy around plans to try to become a country capable of competing for chips.


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