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Argentina eyes Article IV review in Sept: fin min

(Adds details, quotes)

By Paul Kilby and Davide Scigliuzzo

NASSAU, April 9 (IFR) - Argentina will start discussions with the IMF next week on its first Article IV review in a decade, Finance Minister Alfonso Prat-Gay said at a conference held by the Institute of International Finance (IIF) in Nassau.

"Next week we are going to have a discussion (with the IMF)... to agree on an actual schedule for the next Article IV evaluation, which will happen some time around September," Prat-Gay told the audience.

Argentina is one of only seven countries that have delayed the completion of the review for over 18 months. Its last one was in July 2006.

The prior administration had an antagonistic relationship with the Fund, often disputing its forecasts for Argentine economic growth and blaming it in part for the economic crisis following its 2001 default.

"We have no problem with people looking at what we do because we are very confident in what we are doing," said Prat-Gay, stressing that Argentina has already started a broad revamp of its national statistics agency.

"People got to the point where they gave up on statistics, they took them as cheating," he said.

The country is also discussing a pipeline of old and new programs with the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), which is hosting its annual meeting in the Bahamas this week.

Those programs are expected to have a significant implications on the balance of payments of Argentina, which has so far contributed more money to the multilateral institution than it has taken out, Prat-Gay said.

GROWTH IN SIGHT

On the domestic front, Prat-Gay said Argentina's economy should begin to grow in the second half of the year and into 2017.

A strong economy should boost support for the administration of newly elected President Mauricio Macri, whose party still remains in the minority in Congress.

"It is very important for us to gain more seats in Congress... then we will have enough firepower for pending structural reforms," said Prat-Gay.

The government has had to rely on significant support from the opposition to pass key laws to allow Argentina to settle its 15-year long dispute with litigant creditors.

A new multi-billion bond sale expected to come to market as early as April 18 could finally put the legal fight to rest and allow Argentina to also emerge from its 2014 default.

Prat-Gay said the government aims to eliminate the primary fiscal deficit and cut inflation to around 5% - from over 30% this year - by the end of its term in 2019.

(Reporting by Davide Scigliuzzo; Editing by Paul Kilby)