Re: Financial topics
Posted: Fri Jul 05, 2013 4:44 pm
Generational theory, international history and current events
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During hyperinflation people who have a foreign currency can buy all kinds of things really cheap. So a low US dollar price for food in Argentina is consistent with hyperinflation. The question is what is the peso price now and what was it 6 months or a year ago?aedens wrote: 5) I paid $1.30 for a steak the size of your head yesterday. So if you think there is some kind of food crisis in Argentina... you are an idiot. 6) I have come to the conclusion that every article about Argentina on zerohedge is full of it.
I was in Argentina in 2002 and again in 2004. I find it difficult to fathom how the government "saved the people" with their decision to close the banks, revalue the currency from a 1:1 peso/$ rate to a 3:1 Peso/$ rate. Everyone with deposit accounts lost 2/3 of their cash but their debt remained at the original $ amount.aedens wrote: In fact, during the crisisin 2001 and 2002, a member of the parliament stated, "We had the choice to save the banks or save the people. We chose to save the people."
It is not really that the USD is gaining in value. It is that Pesos are dropping fast. But the Argentine market is so desperate for foreign currency that local goods measured in foreign currency are cheap. So sort of the USD is gaining inside Argentina. Normal for hyperinflation is that anything that is not nailed down is sold off to foreigners.aedens wrote: And inflation there is more like 30% with many of the restaurants having menu prices in pencil, because they are changing so fast they often have to erase them within a day or two.
housing properties are priced in USD, yet all the Argentines make ARG Pesos for wages. The local people are getting priced out of the market as the USD continues to gain value.