Basic male haircut costs the same in Argentina and Australia - approx 15USD.
Average salary close to $1500 USD in Argentina, $4000-5000 USD in Australia... Please explain - the only explanation I have is people here charge what they want and the market absorbs it - there is no real price discovery that forces prices to stay down. Its like every industry behaves as its own mafia where everyone agrees to fix prices high (eg supermarkets).
This country is its own worst enemy when it comes to pricing things - its an absolute clusterfuck.
I think it's a lot more complex than just competing on price. That is true--it's a small country and there are just a few businesses, so that's part of it. But the other part of it is:
- Labor unions have sucked both employees and corporations dry of money. They rob from both.
- The time cost of doing business and paperwork here greatly drives up prices. If you have a service provider, say to a super market, that comes to paint the supermarket, he has to have a special receipt, and maybe go downtown to charge his check, and then finally maybe go to his own bank. If you have even a small to medium sized business, you have to have an extra employee just to process payments. And so on and so on. It makes doing business much more expensive, and this is reflected in the price.
- Taxes are astronomically high. People are always so quick to agree to raise corporate taxes. But the corporations never pay for that. You do. 21 percent IVA. Absurd.
- The businesses here are just inefficient and way behind on how they do business. It takes an hour after 5 PM to check out at a grocery store/supermarket. So if I need something quick, I don't go to Carrefour. They lose a lot of business like this to more efficient business models, and it makes the price more expensive in turn, too. Also, the providers are very inefficient, so they don't know how to cut costs, either, and it all adds up. But labor unions make sure no one competes with their already rigged system.
- Infrastructure sucks, and the government electric and gas providers charge you a premium. It ain't so subsidized for businesses, and since the utility companies are run by sleazy government officials or their cronies. unsubsidized prices are frightful. You also pay for this when you purchase a product.
- If you hire an employee, you can get taxed more for your employee than what you pay the employee. So no one wants to hire employees and grow their business or compete, because it's a huge risk. Not to mention all the stupid labor laws that basically prevent you from firing anyone (yes, you can, but you will pay a massive amount of money, especially if they have any seniority). So no one wants to hire anyone. They're content not to compete further, and risk their business going under, because at least they have a stable income in an unstable country.
- Corruption, theft from businesses by employees, theft and robbery (drives up insurance), and the like are rampant. Thus this is reflected in your pricing.
I could go on and on. If the government here would quit giving out so many freebies, quit taxing people to death, and would let people run their businesses in peace, pricing would definitely go down. Also, the labor unions need to be weakened so that manufacturing can at least have a chance to make a comeback.