Natives are going to get restless, no Futball.[url]http://www.usatoday.com/sports/soccer/2009-08-09-3300805132_x.htm[/url]
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Natives are going to get restless, no Futball.[url]http://www.usatoday.com/sports/soccer/2009-08-09-3300805132_x.htm[/url]
There will be futbol, Copa SudAmericana.
Futbol will also start with maybe 1 week of delay, Futbol and Argentina can't live without each other. They will find a way
Yet again I am stuck with another badly made item from argentina. Two years ago I bought one of those heavy shearling coats around Murillo street. I paid $180 US for it. Something similar in the US would be around $700.
I haven't worn in awhile until yesterday when I was cleaning my closet. Something just didn't feel right when I put it on. Finally I figured out what the problem was. One arm has a misaligned seam which curves forward twisting the sleeve at the cuff. Bottom line is it looks awful and cannot be worn.
Since my first visit to BA I have gotten rid of the majority of crap I bought there. I have 2 belts left and a few handkerchiefs thats all. I brought back an army duffel bag worth of crap in 2005.
There were "errors" in a box of candy I recently bought. One piece I ate was rotten or had some fungus growing on it (I didn't see it). Since they were filled Candies I thought maybe one had rum in it. NOT. They were filled with sweet coconut.
Argentina has got to have the worst production is my point. I would much rather own products "made in china".
My carpincho jacket worth $300 hit the crapper too. Eventually it would have ripped on a nail or something.
Be careful what you buy in Argentina.
If you know what you are looking for and take the time to examine the quality before purchasing, you can do just fine. Apply the same principals to buy other products in Bs As as you do buying pussy. Look for well reviewed providers know for delivering quality.
[QUOTE=Sidney]My motto is: Buy nothing in AR![/QUOTE]To Sidney and WW:
I have been shopping in SA for a number of years now and usually inspect merchandise like a new car. My eyes *usually don't do me wrong. I must say though that shopping in SA is extremely frustrating. Even when you buy stuff factory sealed there are major defects. They make the dumbest mistakes I've ever seen.
I assume you know the american brand " carhartt "? They made one style of belt in argentina. The loop that you put the belt through was stapled together! You export that shit under " hecho en argentina "?
Argetina has the worst production I've ever witnessed.
The best places for leather are:
Mexico.
Ecuador.
Colombia.
BA is last. Great skins but no idea what to do with them. The boots I bought are just ok but I would rather any american workboot made in china any day.
[QUOTE=Artisttyp]Argetina has the worst production leather I've ever witnessed. [/QUOTE]This I must agree with you.
Remeber I was a kid in Holland when mother bought me a pair of argentine leather boots. They were hard as stone to wear. Mother told me with passing days will get softer. Three years later they were as harder as the first day.
Leather exports in Argentina are the meanest and corrupt guys I ever met.
I must conclude with Sidney. Buy nothing in AR. But least of all leather products!
I like Kevingston and La Marina and it's about half of what it would cost in Europe.
It is always something when you have bills to pay. Checks in the mail and I promise, won't cum in your mouth, dah de dah.
[QUOTE] BUENOS AIRES (Dow Jones)--Argentina's government has done an about-face with its plans to tap international capital markets and will instead seek to defer about $9 billion in payments by offering a global swap for medium-term debt, the Cronista newspaper reported Wednesday. Economy Minister Amado Boudou won't negotiate with holdbout bondholders nor with the Paris Club of sovereign creditors, it said.[/QUOTE]
I was surprised when Argentina said it was going to tap international markets, since they have to settle with the people they owe money to first, from the last default. So their only real choice is to push back existing debt. The link below is from Reuters. It Talks about borrowing 200 million from the pensions, and the bond swap.
[url]http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idUSN1211085020090812[/url]
Argentina should offer a deal to the hold-outs, settle with the Paris group and buy the inflation linked bonds.
That will be costly but will be a lot cheaper in the long run but that's unlikely to happen untill 2012.
[QUOTE=Joe Hernandez]Argentina should offer a deal to the hold-outs, settle with the Paris group and buy the inflation linked bonds.
That will be costly but will be a lot cheaper in the long run but that's unlikely to happen untill 2012[/QUOTE]See it as one big damn poker game. Cry poverty, threaten default, create fear and panic to whittle the paper down to about ten cents on the dollar and wallah, paid in full, ten cents on the dollar. Do not care who it is, Gringo, Argentine, Ernie Shwartz, when they want the money, promise you everything and anything: "Trust Me." When it comes time to pay up, every damn excuse in the world is used to not meet their obligations. It is never convenient. No one is going to loan anyone anything without an inflation index clause. Suggest the mob start servicing loans.
[QUOTE=Damman]See it as one big damn poker game. Cry poverty, threaten default, create fear and panic to whittle the paper down to about ten cents on the dollar and wallah, paid in full, ten cents on the dollar. Do not care who it is, Gringo, Argentine, Ernie Shwartz, when they want the money, promise you everything and anything: "Trust Me." When it comes time to pay up, every damn excuse in the world is used to not meet their obligations. It is never convenient. No one is going to loan anyone anything without an inflation index clause. Suggest the mob start servicing loans.[/QUOTE]You haven't been following what happend to INDEC?
Nobody will want a inflation index bond.
If they find some way to get them off the market the interest paid on the newly issued bonds will be lower.
[QUOTE=Joe Hernandez]You haven't been following what happend to INDEC?
Nobody will want a inflation index bond.
If they find some way to get them off the market the interest paid on the newly issued bonds will be lower[/QUOTE]Joe, come on, INDEC a reliable number? It is in their best interest to cook the books. No big deal, it will all work out like it is suppose to, in spite of us.
[url]www.seekingalpha.com/article/109270-country-default-risk-rises-across-the-board[/url]
[QUOTE=Damman]Joe, come on, INDEC a reliable number? It is in their best interest to cook the books. No big deal, it will all work out like it is suppose to, in spite of us.[/QUOTE]That's why I said nobody in his right mind will want inflation linked bonds.
I wonder as well if Canal 7 is going to buy the soccer-rights, seems to me it's an expensive way to settle the score with Clarin.
Joe:
Misunderstood your point.
Argentina is like that friend you love and is always in a financial bind. You loan them money and they do pay you. However, two days after you get paid, they are back on your doorstep asking for another loan and the cycle starts all over again. The loan is never paid off except for about eight days a year.
All I wish to know is, how do I position myself when the peso goes to hell in a hand basket?
[QUOTE=Damman]Joe:
Misunderstood your point.
Argentina is like that friend you love and is always in a financial bind. You loan them money and they do pay you. However, two days after you get paid, they are back on your doorstep asking for another loan and the cycle starts all over again. The loan is never paid off except for about eight days a year.
All I wish to know is, how do I position myself when the peso goes to hell in a hand basket?[/QUOTE]Buy dollars or Euros.
[QUOTE=Joe Hernandez]Buy dollars or Euros.[/QUOTE]Given the insane out of control public debt of western economies, I d rather buy solid assets than paper produced en masse based on nothing tangible. Buy rare or soon to be rare assets: art pieces, oil, metals. Real estate next year in the US and Great Britain from next year on could be worth a look, even tho high unemployment and toughened credit rules should sitll weight on those markets for a few years.
[QUOTE=Damman]Joe:
Misunderstood your point.
Argentina is like that friend you love and is always in a financial bind. You loan them money and they do pay you. However, two days after you get paid, they are back on your doorstep asking for another loan and the cycle starts all over again. The loan is never paid off except for about eight days a year.
All I wish to know is, how do I position myself when the peso goes to hell in a hand basket?[/QUOTE]What s the difference between Argentina s thirst for cash and USA s addiction to credit? It seems to me that the debt per household (300,000 USD total debt per household) in the USA is at least 10 times what an average argentine household ows.
[QUOTE=MataHari]What s the difference between Argentina s thirst for cash and USA s addiction to credit? It seems to me that the debt per household (300,000 USD total debt per household) in the USA is at least 10 times what an average argentine household ows.[/QUOTE]The difference is that the American people actually have the capacity to repay the debts that the US Government has incurred on their behalf.
Thanks,
Jackson
[QUOTE=Jackson]The difference is that the American people actually have the capacity to repay the debts that the US Government has incurred on their behalf.
Thanks,
Jackson[/QUOTE]Funniest thing I've heard all week. Probably the truest too.
The federal government is not directly responsible for the subprime crisis. It is indirectly by setting interest rates very low, which induced a real estate bubble, disconnected from real income growth. The money created on house values was then totally virtual. But it is of individual s responsability to not let themselves get trapped into the housing gold rush, speculating on ever increasing prices.
300,000 USD is almost a lifetime saving capacity. US citizens are kept under the pressure of debt all their life long, borrowing to pay for their studies to end up borrowing to pay for their medication. If work is not enough to refund the abyssal debt, the us american economy is condemned to initiate one bubble after another, hoping for capital gains. This will lead to violent assets value corrections and financial crises every 10 years, like in Argentina, since those assets will have to be disconnected from their real value to create money to refund the debt, and force to borrow more in crisis times.
When individuals spend more than they earn (negative personal saving rate), i dont see how they could possibly refund their debt, not mentioning federal debt, only with their work.
A vicious circle that endangers the global ecomic stability, and will give more and more power to countries with positive cash flow.
Quote: The federal government is not directly responsible for the subprime crisis. It is indirectly by setting interest rates very low, which induced a real estate bubble, disconnected from real income growth. The money created on house values was then totally virtual. But it is of individual s responsability to not let themselves get trapped into the housing gold rush, speculating on ever increasing prices.
First thing you'd better do is some homework. The Federal Reserve, and ALL Central Banks, are PRIVATE BANKS! NOT "Federal" but "PRIVATE Banking Cartels." This is what they DID NOT teach you in Economics!
Bet you think "money" is "money" also heh? What we call "money" is actually "debt" not "money." The "debt" that's created and attached compound interest can NEVER BE REPAID! THE INTEREST HAS NEVER BEEN "CREATED."
The Titanic has hit the iceberg and is about to totally go under and to the bottom. If you want to even start to understand the worldwide disaster that looms.
[url]http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=%22Money+As+Debt%22&emb=0#[/url]
Excellent 47 minute animated explanation.
Thanks for your intervention and your link, Town. This video report is very pedagogic and explains in simple words the logic behind the creation of money. But some statements are simply false.
Money is not created out of nothing, since the money lent is backed with the value of a solid asset. If the borrower fails to pay back the money lent + interests, the banker gets the money back by acquiring the underlying asset: house for individuals, firm ownership for companies. Interest rates are the money creation, and they are paid with actual work. Or capital gains.
The problem lies in the need to maintain perpetual growth to avoid a collapse of the system. When work is not enough to maintain the requiered level of growth, debt is used for speculating purposes on the value of the underlying solid assets to keep the necessary growth. This creates real estate and stock market bubbles. The system is then in danger since it s based on artificial values.
And to answer your point, a federal bank, private or public, has no choice but to follow a governments needs and will. Jackson, the president, not the Monger in Chief, got rid of the Federal Bank because they were playing against his interests and distrusted their capacity to create unlimited money without government control. The "independant" status is just, like the monetary system, an illusion, a fairy tale to fit with a democratic other fairy tale. Debt keeps the individual under pressure all his life long, with the illusion of a freedom of choice.
The fact is that the level of debt, even with interest rates for free, passed a level of never return. Even if all us citizens kept the current "crisis rate" of saving at 5% , which would affect the growth rate of consumption permanently, they would be unable to refund that debt with a whole life of work. The only way to lower the debt is create more asset value bubbles and more crisis subsequently. This is why the money lent to american banks mainly by chinese banks was used to speculate on stock exchange: the need to initiate another bubble "as if nothing happened" to save the retiring system based on capital gains. Another evidence of the submission of banks to governments will/need/interests.
One last point, debt is not the only global money creation system. The best evidence is that some states are net debtors and others are net creditors. The federal government doesnt borrow its own money, but the money created elsewhere (global financial system) Those that have the means to lend money to those who don t actually SAVE money, those that spend less than they earn to those that can t save, intoxicated by the cultural and fabricated urge to consume.
[QUOTE=MataHari]What s the difference between Argentina s thirst for cash and USA s addiction to credit? It seems to me that the debt per household (300,000 USD total debt per household) in the USA is at least 10 times what an average argentine household ows.[/QUOTE]MataHari:
Do not know about the idea of "300,000 USD total debt per household." Think it must be remembered that at least 85% of US households are plugging away and making ends meet. Would imagine the numbers in Argentina are about the same: making ends meet.
Access credit / accessing cash are one and the same, no? It is not important, cutting hairs. The point with me is Argentina's permanent predicament, always having to go beg for credit / cash on the world market. It has been a very long time, 50 years maybe, since Argentina has been solvent. Know the idea of begging is offensive, but it is what it is.
In my mind, Argentina should be a very prosperous country. The people are highly educated and the people I know, work and play hard. Find myself at a loss for an explanation, why is Argentina always in a pickle financially? It has been allowed to go on for so long, generation after generation, it is a way of life. Everyone can blame the Government for their problems, but find that to be cop out. Many governments have come and gone in the last fifty years and it is always the same old story: beg for a loan. If you look around the world and count the countries that have pulled themselves out of the depths of despair and turned the corner in past fifty years, it is amazing. However, even with a running start, natural resources and the sophistication of Argentina, it does not make the cut. Guess I have more questions than answers.
Anyone hear about some proposal in Congress about rent controls? The Boss told me the F..... is crazy. The best I came up with is (Google Translator):
Under the initiative, the price payable for the locations, without distinction, should not "depend on the market," but the result of a calculation that would determine the value arising from the tax valuation of each unit and divide by 150 This sort of whimsical shape formula, substantially disadvantageous to landlords.
[url]http://www.lanacion.com.ar/nota.asp?nota_id=1161676[/url]
If I understand the proposal right the owner can only enforce a 2% yearly rent of the declared value of the property. He can off course try to increase the declared value of the property but that would mean that he would have to pay more taxes. As a guarantee only a bank-guarantee will be accepted and someone can stay for 5 years (I would assume with a yearly price increase)
The temporary rentals will also be limited to 3 months.
I don't know how the final plans will be but I would think that if the rental-return is too low many people prefer not to rent out or try to rent out to foreigners, but there is a big oversuply already.
WTF: they have nationalized pensions, airlines, utilities, futball and now apartment rentals. What is next, privados?
Hello Damman,
You are right, numbers are worthless without cited sources. I checked those numbers that I had in mind and found out I underestimated them by far.
The total debt per us household was actually more than 700,000 USD by the end first quarter 2009, for a total of 52,592 billion dollars. (Z1 federak stat: [url]http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/z1/Current/z1.pdf[/url])
In 1983, 1.63 dollar of debt was needed to make one dollar of growth.
In 1997, 3.06 dollars were needed for that growth dollar
In 2008, 6.86 dolllars
In 2009, the massive injection of cash failed to bring growth, except on stock market.
Here is a link that will tell you more about the exponential growth of US debt : [url]http://mwhodges.home.att.net/nat-debt/debt-nat.htm[/url]
The point is to demonstrate that there is absolutely no difference between Argentina and the US regarding debt. The problem is simply unsolvable since it s gone out of control. What saves the US from a massive devaluation is the international status of their currency dating back from 1945 (the USA are allowed to print money for international trading needs) A status that the pace of debt will undoubtedly fragilize.
Joe, I know some countries that regulate the growth of rent based on a construction cost index, more or less linked to inflation. This seems to be a fair basis.
Damman,
I may be naîve but the main reasons why I think Argentina has been such an economic disaster for the last 60 years or so were; lack of democracy, and corruption. From the 30's until 1983 the country never had any kind of democratic government. A succession of military dictatorships, or their friends, forming governments, and the biggest party being excluded from elections, was never going to bring sound economic growth. The fact that the country would win gold if corruption was an Olympic sport doesn't help either. Menen would have won more gold than Michael Phelps.
I have got to get a life. Anyway, the $300K debt number, thought you were referring to personal debt. As for the national debt number per household, off the charts and incomprehensible. Very scary. However, people and countries get in line every month to buy treasuries. What can I say. And you are correct, US has the luxury of having the bench mark currency for the world and can print paper to pay their debts. Quite sure the Chinese are going to make a run at the dollar, but their record is not all that great yet. Who would you loan money to? Like it or not, the only reason the dollar is the benchmark currency of the world, never missed a payment. Again, love or hate the US, they always pay.
[QUOTE=MataHari]The point is to demonstrate that there is absolutely no difference between Argentina and the US regarding debt. The problem is simply unsolvable since it s gone out of control. What saves the US from a massive devaluation is the international status of their currency dating back from 1945 (the USA are allowed to print money for international trading needs) A status that the pace of debt will undoubtedly fragilize. [/QUOTE]Forgive me Mata, but I cannot see how Argentina's debt can possibly be compared with the debt of Gringo land. It all comes down to credit worthiness. What is Argentina's FICO score? Everyone experiences hard times. For Argentina, it has been an ongoing soap opera for fifty years. That is where I have a problem with understanding the mind set of the Argentine people. Very proud industrious population, plenty of natural resouces to go around, should be self sufficient in every respect, but..... nothing to show for it. They have had enough revolutions to fill two encyclopedias and nothing changes.
[QUOTE=SteveC]Damman,
I may be naîve but the main reasons why I think Argentina has been such an economic disaster for the last 60 years or so were; lack of democracy, and corruption. From the 30's until 1983 the country never had any kind of democratic government. A succession of military dictatorships, or their friends, forming governments, and the biggest party being excluded from elections, was never going to bring sound economic growth. The fact that the country would win gold if corruption was an Olympic sport doesn't help either. Menen would have won more gold than Michael Phelps.[/QUOTE]If there were easy answers, the solutions would have followed. It is a complex, self-perpetuating and ultimately up to now, an insolvable conundrum. Democracy per se has never existed in the sense of what that means in the USA. Corruption is a result of and not a cause of bad government. The answers lie elsewhere and I suspect part of the current problems have their roots in the policies that are the basis of Peronism. Peronism is a form of Mussolini's Fascist model. It didn't work in Italy before the Second World War and after being adopted by Juan Peron for Argentina, now 65 years later, surprise, surprise, it still doesn't work. Make of that what you will. I don't have the answers but it surely is not corruption and a lack of western democracy.
Argento
I talked a lot about that issue with Argentine people from all over the country (not just Portenos) Even if the answer is rarely clear, since people express first and foremost their frustrations for their own cases, it seems that there is a cultural reason for this situation; nepotism. To get a job, a situation, a privilege, you need to know somebody who has the power to grant you this privilege. Getting a responsability depends less on your technical skills than on your human skills to influence people. The other cultural reason is to be found in religion. Catholicism favors fatalism, which discharges you from any responsability in case of failure, mystifies poverty while leaving suspicion on quick, oportunistic financial success.
This is a big cultural gap with the USA, where what counts most is visible success and each individual is responsible for his fate (dominant protestant values)
Different philosophies for a similar effect: abyssal debt.
[QUOTE=MataHari]I talked a lot about that issue with argentine people from all over the country (not just portenos) Even if the answer is rarely clear, since people express first and foremost their frustrations for their own cases, it seems that there is a cultural reason for this situation; nepotism. To get a job, a situation, a privilege, you need to know somebody who has the power to grant you this privilege. Getting a responsability depends less on your technical skills than on your human skills to influence people. The other cultural reason is to be found in religion. Catholicism favors fatalism, which discharges you from any responsability in case of failure, mystifies poverty while leaving suspicion on quick, oportunistic financial success.
This is a big cultural gap with the USA, where what counts most is visible success and each individual is responsible for his fate (dominant protestant values)
Different philosophies for a similar effect: abyssal debt.[/QUOTE]Mata, very insightful observation: Catholicism. It is that common thread throughout South America. Some things never change, woes of religion throughout everyone's history.
Thanks
Argentine state just bought the broadcasting rights for the local soccer games for 600 milion peso a season. Seems to me it's a rather expensive way to fight back against Clarin.
The explanation of the president was also hillarious, she said that the broadcasting of soccer games makes democracy stronger because everybody can watch soccer now, not just the ones that can pay for it. She also made a daily reference to the 30.000 desparecidos when the offical death-toll of the Argentine state is little over 8900.