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The dollar chase!

  • serafina
  • January 9, 2018 at 6:22 PM

There are 13 replies in this Thread which has previously been viewed 4,898 times. The latest Post (October 5, 2024 at 10:22 AM) was by UK Man.

1st Official Post
  • serafina
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    • January 9, 2018 at 6:22 PM
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    • #1

    Today I went to a casa de cambio in Mar del Plata and sold my dollars for 19.00 ARS apiece.

    Prices were as follows:

    USD:

    • Venta: 19.00
    • Compra: 19.80

    EUR

    • Venta 23.00
    • Compra 24.50

    What's the ongoing rate in Capital? It should be a little higher, especially outside official channels. Just curious to see how much this dollar increase is reflecting on us peasants.

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  • GlasgowJohn
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    • January 9, 2018 at 10:00 PM
    • #2

    I got 19.20 this pm

    It was slightly higher in the morning

    My man says they are still trying to interpret the very slight fall in interest rates....

  • GlasgowJohn
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    • January 9, 2018 at 10:01 PM
    • #3

    http://www.ambito.com/908838-el-bcra…-de-lo-previsto

  • serafina
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    • January 9, 2018 at 10:05 PM
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    • #4

    <p><woltlab-metacode data-name="user" data-attributes="WzE3XQ==">GlasgowJohn</woltlab-metacode> said:</p>
    <p>My man says they are still trying to interpret the very slight fall in interest rates....</p>
    <p><br></p>
    <p><br></p>
    <p><br>Sometimes the science behind the economy here is as scientific as astrology. <br><br><br></p>

    Edited once, last by serafina: Tried to fix quote by GJ, to no avail :-( (January 10, 2018 at 3:36 PM).

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  • Splinter
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    • January 10, 2018 at 12:26 PM
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    • #5

    Why don't they just do what Ecuador did and dump the Peso for the Dollar as the official currency. It practically is and has been for years.

    http://abcnews.go.com/International/story?id=82666

    Inflation in Ecuador

    https://tradingeconomics.com/country-list/i…ntinent=america

    A Brit In Buenos Aires

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  • Rice
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    • January 10, 2018 at 1:17 PM
    • #6

    When Ecuador adopted the dollar in 2000, I wondered what arrangements one country makes with another, in order to use their currency. Does anyone know? Because US taxpayers finance the minting of coins and printing/continual replacement of bills, I assume there is a financial arrangement between the countries?

    That inflation chart was quite revealing.

  • serafina
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    • January 10, 2018 at 3:37 PM
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    • #7
    Quote from Splinter

    Why don't they just do what Ecuador did and dump the Peso for the Dollar as the official currency. It practically is and has been for years.

    http://abcnews.go.com/International/story?id=82666

    Inflation in Ecuador

    https://tradingeconomics.com/country-list/i…ntinent=america

    I do convert absurd prices to dollar for the seller so that they would realize how absurd it is. However, most people do not know prices abroad so 3 USD or 6 USD sounds the same to them.

    Rice , they must have entered an agreement trunks for dollars: Ecuadorians ship logs, the US ships back bills!

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  • Splinter
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    • January 10, 2018 at 4:43 PM
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    • #8
    Quote from Rice

    When Ecuador adopted the dollar in 2000, I wondered what arrangements one country makes with another, in order to use their currency. Does anyone know? Because US taxpayers finance the minting of coins and printing/continual replacement of bills, I assume there is a financial arrangement between the countries?

    That inflation chart was quite revealing.

    Not to mention the question of fiscal sovereignty.

    I'll look into this for research purposes.

    A Brit In Buenos Aires

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  • Rice
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    • January 10, 2018 at 5:49 PM
    • #9
    Quote from serafina

    Rice , they must have entered an agreement trunks for dollars: Ecuadorians ship logs, the US ships back bills!

    What a splendid idea! Now if we could only get Argentina to use US dollars, the return shipment could be Malbec!

  • Splinter
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    • October 5, 2024 at 7:31 AM
    • #10

    This is going to take a long time because old habits die hard, not to mention the total lack of trust for banks, especially after 2001.

    Apart from tourists, do you know anyone who pays with dollars in a shop or restaurant? Most supermarkets show a USD/peso exchange rate, but I have never seen anyone pay for their goods in dollars.

    Milei wants Argentines to dollarise the economy for him
    Argentina’s President seems to have abandoned his vision of dollarisation of the economy. Instead, he wants his countrymen to do the job for him: dollar by…
    www.batimes.com.ar

    And then there's all those undeclared dollars which Milei is now chasing in the latest amnesty (blanqueo).

    Cultural change takes generations.

    Poverty lies under the mattress
    Idle capital amounting to over half of Gross Domestic Product surely goes a long way towards explaining why over half the population is poor.
    www.batimes.com.ar

    A Brit In Buenos Aires

    Edited once, last by Splinter: Merged a post created by Splinter into this post. (October 5, 2024 at 7:36 AM).

  • Rice
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    • October 5, 2024 at 8:23 AM
    • #11

    Who are Diarco (apparently not Día), Vital (Tony?), and Dinosaurio Group (whose name I love) ?

    I’d be floored if I ever saw anyone paying for anything with dollars. The exception used to be remises at EZE, which priced in pesos and blue- dollar-rate dollars interchangeably. Until all airport vendors were required to use the official exchange rate.

    If Milei wanted to draw out dollars from the mattresses, wouldn’t he allow the dollar:peso rate to increase? It goes down every day, and I keep trying to find either a pattern or an isolatable cause.

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    UK Man
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    • October 5, 2024 at 9:52 AM
    • #12

    As Splinter posts says Millei's plan is to get us to 'open the box' for him and it seems to be working. The gap between the Official and Blue rates has certainly narrowed over the last couple of months.

    I think people would still far rather have a stash of dollars than Mickey Mouse pesos though.

  • serafina
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    • October 5, 2024 at 10:06 AM
    • #13

    Every time there has been a blanqueo, those who did it where later investigated.

    It may sound tempting, but with each president being in charge for just 4 years, and no guarantee about what will happen next (they can - and they will - change the rules again), I don't see this as a solution.

    If the exchange rate was the same, and price reasonables, I would pay using my foreign cards.

    My main issue is not that some things were too cheap and needed to be reasonably priced, but that crappy stuff is now priced as in Europe, if not more, but it is still crap.

    I am amazed by the prices of plastic cleaning supplies in supermarket, like a toilet brush or a bucket. Stuff that at Ikea is nicer, with a better assortment, and costs a fraction.

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    UK Man
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    • October 5, 2024 at 10:22 AM
    • #14
    Quote from serafina

    My main issue is not that some things were too cheap and needed to be reasonably priced, but that crappy stuff is now priced as in Europe, if not more, but it is still crap.

    I am amazed by the prices of plastic cleaning supplies in supermarket, like a toilet brush or a bucket. Stuff that at Ikea is nicer, with a better assortment, and costs a fraction.

    Agreed.....the 'cheap' items are crap in quality but still double the price compared to similar items in the UK. Unlike 20+ years ago quality here come at a high price.

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