EL_TIGRE_de_Tigre
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Frank,But isn't Argentina effectively dollarized anyway? Certainly for big purchases like apartments, houses, cars, and so on. People are only using pesos for small transactions, and rush to convert their spare pesos to Dollars whenever they can.
The mechanics of getting everyone to use Dollars for all transactions are a challenge. Of the countries I know that use Dollars for everyday transactions, Panama and Ecuador are much smaller and it's easier to manage, and Venezuela is a basketcase (more than VEF 400,000 per Dollar now). Getting change is a huge problem (I think almost all the Dollar coins are in Ecuador, 150 million of them, and it's still not enough), and damaged banknotes need to be flown to the US to be replaced. Where's the advantage in doing this?
Agree with your point. Real estate and autos are dollarized as that is the norm for how they are bought and sold.
Using the dollar in Argentina or any other country is a challenging exercise on a huge scale that more or less can create stability at the cost of the sovereign government giving up the right to print money and inflate.
Argentina's secret to all this public assistance for the past 50+ years (Since the days or after of Peron more or less) has been built on the ability to spend and inflate.