The Argentine delegation currently in the United States serves as a practical manual for what Ludwig von Mises termed "intervention that breeds further intervention" and what Rothbard would identify as blatant State hypocrisy. While Milei once shouted in Davos against crony capitalism and insisted that business should be left to the private sector, he is now using taxpayer funds to finance an expensive networking tour for a massive group of governors, ministers, and unofficial hangers-on. It seems like that government spending is not actually being cut, but simply relocated to benefit a new circle of friends and sycophants.
Although the government claims to be selling "institutionality," their actions prove the opposite. A prime example is the RIGI, which requires a minimum investment of $200 million dollars and specific state approval to function. From a true liberal perspective, if you need a special law to convince people to invest, you are openly admitting that your standard laws are an obstacle. This framework forces smaller investors to remain trapped under the old, broken rules and currency controls while the big players get a pass. This is not institutional strength; it is a confession of failure presented in a pompous setting.
The situation reaches its low point with the inclusion of the President's sister, Karina in high-level meetings. Even though she has a background in tarot and television contests, she attempts to negotiate with international investors without the necessary English skills, legal standing, or professional credentials. This is more than just minor nepotism; it is "brutalism," the most destructive signal a government can send. A government truly committed to the market should limit itself to letting free prices attract capital, rather than relying on surnames or religious associations.
These are essentially libertarians in formal wear who have not even finished the first page of Human Action. Mises never suggested shrinking the State for one's enemies while expanding it for one's family; he argued for eliminating the State as the arbiter of the economy.
There is no such thing as a "Misesian RIGI" or a "Rothbardian nepotism." In its golden age, a thriving Argentina didn't need delegations or forums to explain its success because it attracted honest capital through simple, inflexible, and respected rules. Today, the country begs for fresh dollars every few weeks because of a moral and institutional gap where words no longer match deeds. They are, quite simply, "half-baked liberals" who choose talk over action.