The issue is that the peso is overvaluated.
This, coming from the man who
insisted ad nauseam that the value of the peso is (or was)
by definition whatever Vanoli wanted it to be.
Amazing how perspectives change.
UPDATE: Reading up to fetch those links was a nice trip down memory lane. We were treated, for example, to
predictions that the cepo would
continue albeit under a different name. Presumably a fiscal policy that, for all of its faults, didn't revolve around coercion was simply unimaginable.
For all of the woes of the present, and the performance of the current administration which leaves much to be desired, one needs to go back and read to bring back memories of just how bad things were. A small example, related to my day job: Most airlines (American, Air Canada, Copa, Avianca, etc) had
completely halted the sale of air tickets in pesos, whereas just about everyone else (LAN, TAM, Delta, etc) had severely restricted the same. Fare rules for most tickets I dealt with stated MAY NOT BE SOLD IN VENEZUELA/ARGENTINA. We were well on our way to becoming the second Bolivarian paradise of South America.
Things now are far from satisfactory, but just a year out one needs to strain to remember what a twilight zone things were.