Argentina returns to the center of the global stage.

Argentina returns to the center of the global stage.
Argentina returns to the center of the global stage.
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The new global order makes lithium, energy, and Argentine food strategic.

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The global economy is entering a new historical stage. For decades, the world discussed globalization, free trade, and value chains distributed across different continents. But the acceleration of the technological, energy, and geopolitical dispute among the great powers has begun to modify that framework. Today, the most powerful nations no longer think solely about producing cheaper. They think about ensuring control, security, and strategic access to critical resources.

The new axis of world power revolves around energy, strategic minerals, food, technology, and the ability to secure reliable supply chains. Lithium, copper, gas, oil, rare earths, and natural resources are once again taking center stage in international politics. And this is redefining alliances, investments, and priorities.

The world seems to be heading towards a kind of competition among Great Nations to see who can consolidate the best possible supply structure for their respective economies. The United States, China, India, and Europe have already begun that race. What is at stake is not just trade. It is power.

However, unlike other moments in history, the current scenario does not necessarily seem to lead to an immediate global military conflict. There is still too much economic space to contest before reaching an open confrontation among powers. The most likely outcome is that the next one or two decades will be dominated by a global mining, energy, and technological race.

And in that landscape, Argentina could occupy an unexpectedly relevant position.

For years, the country chose to turn its back on the world. While other economies competed to attract capital, innovation, and talent, Argentina became trapped in a logic of controls, regulations, tax pressure, and permanent hostility towards the private sector. The entrepreneur was presented as suspicious. Foreign investment was demonized. And producing wealth seemed almost a moral failing.

This model not only impoverished the country. It also caused Argentina to squander one of the greatest geoeconomic opportunities in its recent history.

Because while much of the leadership discussed subsidies, corporate privileges, and the distribution of nonexistent wealth, the world began to demand exactly what Argentina possesses in abundance. Energy. Minerals. Food. Territory. Strategic natural resources. Human capital.

The difference is that now those advantages once again have global political value.

In this context, the decision of Javier Milei's government to align Argentina with the West and strengthen strategic ties with the United States represents not just a diplomatic definition. It represents a long-term economic decision.

This move could turn the country into a key strategic partner for the energy and mineral security of the West. And there lies the true turning point.

If Argentina can maintain relatively predictable rules, macroeconomic stability, and openness to investments, the flow of capital that could enter during the next decade would be of a magnitude difficult to gauge by current Argentine standards. It is not just about some isolated projects. It is about hundreds of billions of dollars linked to energy, mining, infrastructure, ports, technology, transportation, and associated industrial development.

The economic expansion that could arise from this process finds only one comparable precedent in the growth cycle that Argentina experienced between 1860 and 1920, when the country transitioned from being a peripheral nation to becoming one of the most dynamic economies in the world.

Of course, there is an indispensable condition for this to happen. And that condition does not depend on geology or natural resources. It depends on politics.

Argentina has already demonstrated too many times its capacity to destroy historical opportunities. Every time the country seemed to approach a stage of sustained growth, corporate logic, populism, legal insecurity, statism, and the obsession with punishing those who produce reappeared. The Argentine problem has never been the lack of resources. It has been the existence of a political leadership incapable of coexisting with a free society and a competitive economy.

Therefore, the real challenge will not be finding investments. The world already needs what Argentina has. The challenge will be to prevent politics from ruining it again.

Because this time the opportunity seems too great to waste again.


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