Named Economy Minister by a new dictator, General
Leopoldo Galtieri, in December 1981, Alemann departed from his expansionist policies of twenty years earlier and introduced his own
austerity program: cuts in
public spending, accelerated
devaluation of the
peso (which had already lost 75% of its value during 1981), and a mandatory wage freeze (amid 10% monthly inflation). He also attempted to repair relations with the
International Monetary Fund by proposing the
privatization of an array of
state enterprises, and elicited signals of support from the
Reagan administration, but also triggered protest from
labor unions, culminating in a massive, March 30, 1982, rally against Alemann by the
General Confederation of Labour (Argentina) (CGT), then South America's largest trade union. Ultimately, Galtieri's
invasion of the Falkland Islands, on April 2, derailed Alemann's rapprochement with U.S. and European creditors, and following Galtieri's defeat and subsequent resignation in June, Alemann was replaced; the economy, which had fallen 6% in 1981, fell by as much again in 1982 to its lowest level in a decade. ==Later years==