© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Argentina's Treasury Minister Nicolas Dujovne gestures during a news conference in Buenos Aires
By Eliana Raszewski
BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Argentina?s Treasury Minister Nicolas Dujovne has resigned, saying in a letter seen by Reuters on Saturday he believed the government needed “significant renewal” in its economic team amid a crisis which saw the peso plunge this week.
Dujovne said in a letter to Argentine President Mauricio Macri that he had given his “all” to the job, helped tame a significant deficit and trim public spending.
“We have made mistakes as well, without a doubt, we never hesitate to recognize that and did all that was possible to correct them,” he added.
“I believe my resignation is in keeping with my place in a government… that listens to the people and acts accordingly,” he added.
Macri has appointed Hernan Lacunza, the current economy minister for Buenos Aires province, as Dujovne?s replacement, a government source told Reuters.
Argentina?s peso
The peso depreciated 21% by the end of the week and on Friday, in a fresh blow to Macri, ratings agencies Fitch and S&P downgraded Argentina?s sovereign debt rating, raising the specter of a default as the October election approaches.
Lacunza is the former general manager of Argentina?s Central Bank and also of the Buenos Aires City Bank.
(Reporting Eliana Raszewski; writing by Aislinn Laing; Editing by Marguerita Choy)