For more than 30 years, I and a number of my Cato colleagues have been travelling to Argentina, where we have participated in countless meetings, media appearances, and public events organized by local think tanks or Cato itself. We have been close observers of what may be the most politically erratic country in the most politically erratic region of the world, and we've been active participants in its public policy debates and in Argentina's classical- liberal movement. Prominent Argentine thinkers such as Alberto Benegas Lynch, Jr., whom President Javier Milei cites as his intellectual mentor, and Martin Krause, are long- time Cato adjunct scholars. (See this essay by Daniel Raisbeck on the history of Argentina's classical liberal tradition--the longest and richest in Latin America--and how it has influenced the current political moment.)
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