I agree with most of these things on this thread regards the city. It only makes sense if you are expecting trouble; perhaps on the run from tax inspectors.
Perceptions are everything. I heard a lot of negative stuff about here. A massive amount. I was told I would definitely be held up at gunpoint for my bicycle, have everything stolen, get run over.
For example, I'm trying to cross a very big road, I get halfway and the pedestrian light turns to red. I keep walking because my northern hemisphere mind thinks it has right of way. I nearly get to the other side and a car is literally driving at me at top speed. They trying to kill me! I have to dive out of the way while they honk their horn. I'm enraged and take a swing with a boot before I relise it's too late to smash a light or something.
My reactions are understandable. A horn honk is a anchor in my mind to aggression; the only time I hear it at home is in very aggressive situations, not as a simply as a warning. Then bear in mind that the average person runs red lights to avoid getting mugged during the economic crashes. Then combine that with the difference in economics of cars - even more of a status symbol with the higher price brings with it a sense of entitlement - that cars are more important than people.
With all this kind of thing going on but in such a subtle way? Not as easy to fit in as an expat here as first appears.
Regards money. It seems the same prices here are basically the same as nicer places. That is fundamental and for me I'd never be here out of choice because of that -it's a city, which I view as a big money sink the world over. If here to enjoy, that is a thing of the past. If here to survive, that's different
“I know there are many other places in the world where things run better and more efficiently and life is not a constant fight, but we can’t do that here…because we’re Argentine”
Is this key? So true! This sums it up. Collective ego. So many times I've come across this. This is the hardest. It's like there's all lack of hope. The thing is, it's not just big political change, it's even the little the everyday things. We expats bring in new ways of thinking. When the locals see us doing things that to them seem strange they are sometimes intrigued, but very often `We can't do that, we're Argentine` - an unwillingness to change in any way. Is it a lack of hope? Is it a distrust of change?
I propose not tipping - no way! I propose selling something new here - it will never work! I do this, that, anything new `It will never work`!
For example, many on here say they have achieved residency, bank accounts, citizenship. Mention plans like this to a local and they will say `forget it`, or even `you can't do that!` or even `ah, you want to cheat!`
The possibility that something may be simply good and free just isn't on the radar - not to be trusted.
A healthy distrust is one thing but this goes too far, stifling more than the reality. Yes things are not so easy but retain hope. Banks don't work? -find a way round it. Employees are rubbish? -find a way round it. Always got to believe there's an answer.
And I believe that creates opportunities for the outsider that we are uniquely placed to benefit from.
Is this the key to the Argentine conundrum?
Now I wonder how things apply to outside Buenos Aires...?