Argentine laws are written, and economic history as well, so that its virtually impossible to lose real estate. You cannot have a bank repossess because there are no loans. You cannot evict tenants in practicality, even if there some legal years long routes that kind of sort of say you could.
Argentina in general has a much larger percentage of small family owned businesses than most western countries.
Rite Aid Drugs, or Sears, can go bankrupt in a month- but there are several storefronts I know of, including one in a very high rent stretch of Santa Fe, that have been vacant for years and years, because the owners have closed the family store, but have no interest in renting or selling.
Make me.
Argentine business people think very differently than other nationalities.
If you own the stock and the store outright, and nobody is buying, you wait. Sometimes years. Its why you can find stores here with stock decades old.
I was in a store in Once a couple of years ago with mens woolen suiting fabrics, from Germany and Japan and Italy, that was ten to 30 years old, and was basically unavailable anywhere else on earth. But here, there is confidence that, no matter how bad things get, it will still be saleable at some time in the future, so you sit, sip your mate, and wait.
Thats the way its been since 1929, and nobody expects that to change.
Walmart and Carrefour may close and pack up and leave, if their beancounters and shareholders demand it.
Local stores will still be here.