According to this article, will make very little difference
nicoenarg said:I am hoping this isn't going to turn into a "is Argentina going down the drain or not" debate.
I was just wondering about the short term changes that we might or might not see after August 3rd.
genialf said:My guess is now they'll let the peso devaluate (officially). For those who are earning salaries in pesos is bad news, specially if this comes with high inflation (which I'm guessing it will do).
Jaredberryman said:A friend of mine that works in a government job told me that this woman has a bank account in Cuba where she is embezzling millions of dollars, then that money goes out to offshore accounts in Switzerland, Gran Cayman, etc. Everyday, my friend sees how government officials sign contracts and then just take half of the money and give the other half for the project. There's only so long that kind of thing can go on. The problem isn't foreign payments--this government has shown that when they don't have any money for that, they just refuse to pay it. The problem is internal.
ElQueso said:I've seen estimates that Cristina has money measured in the hundreds of millions in accounts out of the country. That may be an exaggeration, but still...No one really knows what happened to the money from petroleum in Patagonia that Nestor put into an offshore bank account to "keep it safe", as I understand it. Not to mention a lot of other smaller deals and all the corruption he was involved in while he was still alive.
bradlyhale said:Brazil has about five times more foreign reserves than Argentina. Argentina embraces protectionism because it doesn't want the foreign debt. If you run a trade deficit too long, you end up like many of the European countries up-to-their-eyeballs in debt. Free trade is a fantasy.
Everyone agrees that things in Argentina are slowing down, but it's no where near a crisis. It's really quite too early to say. Soybean prices are high; Moreno has successfully managed to bring down the trade deficit with Brazil; and this past week they've been busy, busy, busy meeting with the Venezuelans, the Brazilians, the Chinese, etc. about investments, industrial cooperation, etc., etc. Companies are investing too. Telefonica just announced an investment for 4.5 billion pesos. Small businesses are apparently all over these new 15% APR/3-year term loans. With that said, many things are down: real estate sales, employment, new car sales... But marginally.
I read an opinion column earlier this year, and the author said something to the effect that there's a small fire in one area of the house. They have the resources this year to control it. Next year we'll see if it spreads.
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