TrevorCito,
Do you think it was worthwhile to spend 10 years in Argentina? Has it affected you and your children in any positive (or negative) way?
Best wishes in your transition back to civilization.
It depends on your perspective... We have enjoyed a different culture, made new friends, learned a new language so from that perspective it has been worthwhile. Economically it hasn't been as positive and it hasn't been beneficial career wise so while we've gained an international perspective and see things more broadly, that perspective has come at a cost.
I can see general Argentine apathy starting to influence my children and that comes from the schools and the friends they associate with. Corruption from the top down (president, deputies, government officials) is a bad influence and high levels of inflation are robbing their future so I'd prefer that they invest their time in a country and culture where corruption, while existent, is minimal and controlled.
While Argentina loves technology (iphone, tablets, TV's para todos), there is no innovation here and no understanding of the concept or the need to innovate high tech products. For example, I was developing a high tech product that required some basic circuit boards to be manufactured. I couldn't find a single company here that had the capability, technology or knowledge to do it. Furthermore, trying to import these circuits from China resulted in more grief than you can imagine. The message was clear... if you want to innovate, do it in another country because Argentina is for humble farmers, not capitalistic high tech visionaries.
I want my family to be safe. We believe that with worsening economic conditions that it's only a matter of time before really bad things begin to happen in this country. Argentina has done relatively well economically over the last 10 years, not because of government policies but in spite of them. The world has been buying their commodities but the trend has started to reverse and in a dramatic way due to lower commodity demand internationally. Argentina will have less money over the next few years and this will cause social unrest and problems in ways we can only imagine.
I want to show my children that other countries can function well and that the majority can benefit without the need for intense government controls, populist policies and corruption. Government interference in just about every aspect of our lives is also a problem going forward. Everything here is controlled by the government and the few enlightened persons who see what's going on are powerless to do anything about it or have drunk the 'cool-aid' and are in on it themselves.
While Argentina loves technology (iphone, tablets, TV's para todos), there is no innovation here and no understanding of the concept or the need to innovate high tech products. For example, I was developing a high tech product that required some basic circuit boards to be manufactured. I couldn't find a single company here that had the capability, technology or knowledge to do it. Furthermore, trying to import these circuits from China resulted in more grief than you can imagine. The message was clear... if you want to innovate, do it in another country because Argentina is for humble farmers, not capitalistic high tech visionaries.
This is the concept that the local protectionists cannot comprehend: The more they close their economy from imports, the harder it will be to innovate and produce high tech items in Argentina. The more they "protect" their industry, the more they are strangling it. It is like someone blocking the imports of typewriters in order to protect the local pencil manufacturers, and then wondering why the quantity of publishing material created in Argentina does not increase.
This is the concept that the local protectionists cannot comprehend: The more they close their economy from imports, the harder it will be to innovate and produce high tech items in Argentina. The more they "protect" their industry, the more they are strangling it. It is like someone blocking the imports of typewriters in order to protect the local pencil manufacturers, and then wondering why the quantity of publishing material created in Argentina does not increase.
Great analogy, Camberiu! It reminds me of the many Argentines who equate assembly factories with actual industrial manufacturing plants.
TrevorCito, it sounds like you've made a thoughtful decision for the benefit of your family. Best of luck in your move and your future!
I guess we have a different perspective on things.
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