The odd thing to me is that Industria Argentina products are cheaper than imports. A locally made chomba is 1/4 the price of a LaCoste, which is made in central america, not france, anyway.
Industria Argentina chomba, on mercado libre today, 25,000 pesos
La Coste, 150,000 to 200,000.
So why would Argentine factories be the ones that are going to go out of business.
I have made a point, over the last 15 years, to buy Industria Argentina whenever possible, including kitchenware, furniture, shoes, clothing, tools, and more. And its always been significantly cheaper than imports, while often the same quality.
A nice argentine made drop forged hammer, for example, is cheaper than a Stanley or one imported from europe, and it hits just exactly as well.
With the peso staying basically the same against the dollar, it seems as if imports would actually be cheaper than they have been, but the same sewing machine that costs $275 in the USA was about $325 in dollars at the october conversion rate to pesos, and now, on Mercado Libre, its $800 when using the current dollar to peso rate.
This defies most forex models I have seen.
Why would something that has not changed its dollar price, in a time when the dollar to peso rate is basically static, have tripled in pesos?