Perfil (Sabado)

> CURRENCY MELTDOWN UP ENDS BUSINESSES

- BY JORGELINA DO ROSARIO AND IGNACIO OLIVERA DOLL

Argentina’s battle to control its currency is upending its economy, wreaking havoc on everything from household finances to the production and sale of common goods.

Measures including taxes on greenback purchases and demands that some companies restructur­e their dollar-denominate­d debts have misfired, propelling the gap between the official and the black market exchange rates to the widest since 1989 while failing to boost internatio­nal reserves. Some analysts warn a large devaluatio­n may be on the horizon despite President Alberto Fernández’s public opposition to the idea.

Controls on the peso and increased money printing are adding to the coronaviru­s pandemic and amplifying existing economic problems such as a three-year recession and one of Latin America’s fastest inflation rates, all while stirring memories of past crises.

“You can’t de-dollarise the mentality of a nation simply by cutting its access to dollars,” said Adriana Dupita, Latin America economist for Bloomberg Economics. “Rather, the only way to convince agents to think in peso terms is to have policies that make the currency credible. So far, we are yet to see those policies.”

Here are some examples of how a dysfunctio­nal currency is complicati­ng day-to-day lives:

WHAT’S A PESO WORTH?

Parallel exchange rates are making life impossible for local businesses, hindering their ability to plan and creating a daily headache of discerning how much the peso is worth. For Lucas Frascoli, the owner of the bicycle manufactur­er Fad Bikes in the outskirts of Rosario, any change in the official rate immediatel­y impacts steel pipe prices. On top of that, some suppliers work with prices tied to an intermedia­te level between the official peso and the black market rate.

“My suppliers send open bills with the quantity of products but with no prices. The day they send the products, I get to know the price, and then I pay immediatel­y,” he said. “I have new prices every single week.”

NO-ONE WANTS PESOS

The widening gap between the official and the parallel exchange rates is stoking consumer fears that a large devaluatio­n is coming. Meanwhile, annual inflation running near 40 percent adds to the sensation that the local currency is losing value fast.

As a result, many common Argentines rush to unload their pesos at all cost. “Nobody wants pesos, so clients don’t care anymore about the prices. They just buy,” said Pablo Gaytan, co-owner of Corralon Ciudadela, a local business in the province of Buenos Aires that sells constructi­on materials. A shortage of supplies amid a strict coronaviru­s lockdown has also added to the uncertaint­y, he said.

IMPORT SHORTAGES

The government has clamped down on imports to prevent dollars from flowing out of the country, leading to shortages of key goods from abroad.

In the case of Edgardo Guerrini, who owns Guerrini Neumaticos SA, the administra­tion has not granted him authorizat­ion to purchase vehicle tires from Asia for the last two months. As a result, he has no inventory to distribute from Mendoza Province to a network of more than 600 shops nationwide.

The domestic food market is another sector hit hard by the restrictio­ns, according to Pablo Ricatti, who runs a company that makes rolls for burgers and hot dogs. “There is a shortage of products that have some imported components, such as mustard,” Ricatti said.

REAL-ESTATE WOES

While it’s been standard practice to sell Argentine properties in US dollars, some owners have started to price rents in greenbacks, too. Still, the lack of trust in the direction of the peso makes it difficult to determine future housing costs, especially as capital controls force Argentines to use the black market to buy the dollars or agree to pay in pesos based on the informal currency rate.

“Permanent and temporary rentals are being dollarized in some locations and for some consumers in top segments,” said Jose Rozados, director of real estate consultanc­y Reporte Inmobiliar­io. “It’s very hard for the household owner to forecast prices with this volatility.”

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