ghost said:
You have to be kidding. On the topic of "Good Service" argentina is famously BAD. Everywhere and in every case. The only good service I have recieved here is from DirecTV. They are on time and on the phone when you need them. Banks, Markets , Restos, and cafes all suck! It's not Argentinas fault. It's the friggin CIA, they did it.
I disagree. Since returning to Argentina I've had the best and the worst service, in different areas.
-- Good service when the attendant fills up my car with gas and cleans all windows, unasked and without waiting for a tip.
-- Good service when the local bakery delivers half a dozen medialunas in a rainstorm, so I can have a good breakfast.
-- Good service when the gardeners volunteer to unload my car, unasked.
-- Good service when the waiter at a neighborhood restaurant remembers exactly how I like my steak, and brings me the book I left there on my last visit.
-- Good service when they bring a bowl of water for my dog when I'm at a sidewalk cafe, again unasked.
-- Good service when the three owners of the hardware store spend half an hour trying to find the exact bolt I need to put up a shelf, and consult with each other, and argue about the relative merits of different kinds of bolts.
(And much good will from the other customers, who pitch in with their own suggestions).
-- Good service when my car mechanic brings me back home, and picks me up every time I take my car to be fixed, and good service when he doesn't charge me for small things that take him fifteen minutes to fix, because I'm an old client.
-- Bad service when the house painter fails to show up as arranged, and doesn't even bother to come.
-- Bad service at the bank's ATMs, who all seem to go offline at the same time.
-- Bad service when you have to wait six months to get a car after putting down a deposit, and the dealer doesn't give you the car's final price until it actually arrives. So you are buying something without knowing how much it will cost.
Some expats' assumption that THEIR way of doing things is the right way and that everything in Argentina "sucks", as they so elegantly put it, can be very offensive. They love to point out how much better
everything is in their home countries. If they go around with that kind of attitude, no wonder they don't get better service from "the locals".
They often expect things to be done exactly the way they are done "back home", which shows a degree of naivete bordering on lunacy. This is a different country, and things are done differently. Less efficiently, certainly, but that's the way it is. Better try getting used to that if you plan to stay.
Finally, if everything is so peachy in other countries, what are we all doing here? I moved here from Washington, D.C., and there are many things I miss. But there are many things that I enjoy, too. Why not look at those instead of kvetching?