Everything made in Argentina is stamped with "Industria Argentina."
Anything stamped with that falls apart after 3 months of use.
Anything stamped with that falls apart after 3 months of use.
Quote: (04-29-2019 05:19 AM)CynicalContrarian Wrote:
As this was a rather old thread initially. What is the current state of play in Argentina?
Quote: (04-29-2019 05:19 AM)CynicalContrarian Wrote:
As this was a rather old thread initially. What is the current state of play in Argentina?
Quote: (04-29-2019 06:41 AM)Going strong Wrote:
Quote: (04-29-2019 05:19 AM)CynicalContrarian Wrote:
As this was a rather old thread initially. What is the current state of play in Argentina?
The current state of play is the usual one: troubled (though secretly, not so bad).
And as always, one could sum it all by: the Argentinians who have (savings in) USD fare very well, and those who couldn't save hard money in USD, are in some (relatively moderate) trouble, because of the inflation (perceived and felt in pesos).
For most travelers in any case, Argentina remains a very good, safe destination, providing one brings hard currency and good temper.
Politically, it seems almost possible that the "she-horse" Cris might win the electionlater this year, thus providing a life-line to Maduro (if Maduro survives six months) and communism on the continent. But I bet that eventually and reasonably, intelligent center-Right Macri will actually win re-election, with just enough help from Lagarde and the FMI (to somehow stabilize the peso).
Quote: (04-29-2019 12:42 PM)Swordfish1010 Wrote:
RVF Argentina meetup?
Quote: (04-29-2019 04:13 AM)KnjazMihailo Wrote:
I'm not so sure Argentina is really declining. This all honestly seems to be quite exaggerated with a lot of people being upset at socialism (not that i'm a fan of socialism).
While i do not know too much about Argentina or Latin America for that matter, to call it declining, especially compared to the Anglosphere or West Europe, just seems like a silly attempt by people from these places to pretend that "Oh look, they're doing worse than us!" in order to distract from their own problems.
Its true that Argentina has serious economic issues, but in many other ways its in a better state than the Anglosphere and West Europe. It does not have the non-European migration problem that the Anglosphere and West Europe do. Its true that they have population decline issues and an unfortunately recently intensified push of feminism, but their country is still more homogeneous than any country in the previously aforementioned groups are.
Of course, this could always change for the worse in the future as NGO's try to promote and encourage non-european migration into Argentina.
Quote: (04-29-2019 06:41 AM)Going strong Wrote:
Quote: (04-29-2019 05:19 AM)CynicalContrarian Wrote:
As this was a rather old thread initially. What is the current state of play in Argentina?
The current state of play is the usual one: troubled (though secretly, not so bad).
And as always, one could sum it all by: the Argentinians who have (savings in) USD fare very well, and those who couldn't save hard money in USD, are in some (relatively moderate) trouble, because of the inflation (perceived and felt in pesos).
For most travelers in any case, Argentina remains a very good, safe destination, providing one brings hard currency and good temper.
Politically, it seems almost possible that the "she-horse" Cris might win the electionlater this year, thus providing a life-line to Maduro (if Maduro survives six months) and communism on the continent. But I bet that eventually and reasonably, intelligent center-Right Macri will actually win re-election, with just enough help from Lagarde and the FMI (to somehow stabilize the peso).
Quote: (04-29-2019 05:13 PM)BBinger Wrote:
Just don't ... invest in Argentina
Quote: (04-29-2019 12:42 PM)Swordfish1010 Wrote:
RVF Argentina meetup?
Quote: (04-30-2019 09:33 AM)911 Wrote:
True, you'd be buying at the ground floor, with the caveat that you have to check the legal landscape, especially as a foreigner.
In Venezuela, prices have been at rock-bottom but have already gone up because speculators think regime change is coming.
Quote: (04-30-2019 10:38 AM)Going strong Wrote:
Quote: (04-30-2019 09:33 AM)911 Wrote:
True, you'd be buying at the ground floor, with the caveat that you have to check the legal landscape, especially as a foreigner.
In Venezuela, prices have been at rock-bottom but have already gone up because speculators think regime change is coming.
Not really buying at the ground floor, as far as Buenos Aires is concerned. Owners of apartments in BsAs stand their ground quite well, so local prices have only lost say 10% (in dollars, all properties are quoted in USD), but hey, it's something (a 10%-gain for the foreign buyer) - and prices will climb at some point, probably once the engineer Macri is re-elected.
As to the legal landscape, no particular problem there. Argentina respects the usual laws of property, and titles of property have full and sufficient value. Only difficulty would be to bring the foreign money into an Argentinian bank account, and for that you would need local help (and come to think of legal aid on the ground, well, our local expert Mekorig certainly would know about this).
Quote: (04-30-2019 12:46 PM)911 Wrote:
You have to look into things like rent control and eviction rights, AirBnB local rules, nonresident taxation laws if you're planning on renting your place out as a foreign investor. If you're an expat though, it sounds like buying is a non-brainer.
Quote: (04-30-2019 05:48 PM)Heuristics Wrote:
I have heard that the liberalism and SJWism in Argentina are in an advanced stage at this point... apparently these marxist tendencies are spreading across the continent. I don't know whether this is true or not.
But a classmate of mine who was heavily SJW went down there to live, participate in pride parades, liberal activism, veganism and drinking of high priced faggot hipster coffee. Likely a bad omen if it's on the map for liberal american girls.
Quote: (02-16-2014 10:11 PM)assman Wrote:
Quote: (02-16-2014 09:44 PM)Corroncho Wrote:Really? Did they call for no TARP, no QE, etc. (because bailing out the 'TBTF' banks is most definitely socialism)?
The Economist is definitely anti-Argentina and anti-socialism across the board