The Japan Times - Argentina's dollar craze cools under greenback-loving Milei

EUR -
AED 3.819929
AFN 78.069048
ALL 98.374002
AMD 414.837161
ANG 1.875358
AOA 950.035504
ARS 1088.88916
AUD 1.658169
AWG 1.874607
AZN 1.769895
BAM 1.956296
BBD 2.101033
BDT 126.899131
BGN 1.955418
BHD 0.391938
BIF 3079.151263
BMD 1.040004
BND 1.411844
BOB 7.190754
BRL 6.172526
BSD 1.040564
BTN 89.901935
BWP 14.442524
BYN 3.405431
BYR 20384.073383
BZD 2.09021
CAD 1.496227
CDF 2958.810765
CHF 0.945469
CLF 0.037327
CLP 1030.175736
CNY 7.579137
CNH 7.584352
COP 4425.361531
CRC 525.128123
CUC 1.040004
CUP 27.560099
CVE 110.291909
CZK 25.117121
DJF 185.305211
DKK 7.460886
DOP 63.85558
DZD 140.335589
EGP 52.303552
ERN 15.600056
ETB 133.058064
FJD 2.406363
FKP 0.856534
GBP 0.844121
GEL 2.974111
GGP 0.856534
GHS 15.764846
GIP 0.856534
GMD 75.919918
GNF 8998.065602
GTQ 8.041846
GYD 217.703116
HKD 8.101572
HNL 26.492082
HRK 7.674758
HTG 135.99318
HUF 410.178429
IDR 16872.968743
ILS 3.716818
IMP 0.856534
INR 89.883312
IQD 1363.132582
IRR 43784.157876
ISK 145.850071
JEP 0.856534
JMD 163.589913
JOD 0.737778
JPY 162.532307
KES 134.420699
KGS 90.946557
KHR 4190.022297
KMF 491.503922
KPW 936.003485
KRW 1494.610302
KWD 0.320612
KYD 0.867212
KZT 541.802191
LAK 22687.53539
LBP 93184.93561
LKR 310.711327
LRD 206.04027
LSL 19.315034
LTL 3.070861
LVL 0.629087
LYD 5.12125
MAD 10.404939
MDL 19.406735
MGA 4878.190199
MKD 61.483838
MMK 3377.891592
MNT 3533.932834
MOP 8.349037
MRU 41.447112
MUR 48.318843
MVR 16.026325
MWK 1804.440254
MXN 21.267999
MYR 4.621759
MZN 66.466892
NAD 19.315034
NGN 1619.743871
NIO 38.289342
NOK 11.726812
NPR 143.843095
NZD 1.836619
OMR 0.400332
PAB 1.040554
PEN 3.869888
PGK 4.177059
PHP 61.036804
PKR 290.034681
PLN 4.213406
PYG 8227.8888
QAR 3.793362
RON 4.97475
RSD 117.076382
RUB 103.361328
RWF 1444.452423
SAR 3.900901
SBD 8.813749
SCR 14.845062
SDG 625.042183
SEK 11.462802
SGD 1.411238
SHP 0.856534
SLE 23.597999
SLL 21808.358427
SOS 594.745108
SRD 36.509359
STD 21525.977742
SVC 9.10509
SYP 13522.128664
SZL 19.322714
THB 35.387685
TJS 11.389279
TMT 3.650413
TND 3.322263
TOP 2.435792
TRY 37.067797
TTD 7.073726
TWD 34.094426
TZS 2616.649414
UAH 43.704363
UGX 3834.935662
USD 1.040004
UYU 45.540673
UZS 13506.295317
VES 57.920169
VND 26135.294087
VUV 123.471333
WST 2.912871
XAF 656.117082
XAG 0.034443
XAU 0.000379
XCD 2.810662
XDR 0.801796
XOF 656.123392
XPF 119.331742
YER 259.012943
ZAR 19.29597
ZMK 9361.282946
ZMW 28.954064
ZWL 334.880781
  • RBGPF

    -0.9200

    61.28

    -1.5%

  • JRI

    -0.0180

    12.512

    -0.14%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.43

    -0.26%

  • BCC

    1.0150

    128.935

    +0.79%

  • SCS

    -0.0050

    11.575

    -0.04%

  • RIO

    0.2900

    61.41

    +0.47%

  • NGG

    0.5200

    60.57

    +0.86%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    23.39

    +1.03%

  • GSK

    0.5140

    33.944

    +1.51%

  • RELX

    -0.0050

    49.255

    -0.01%

  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    7.5

    +3.07%

  • VOD

    0.0550

    8.435

    +0.65%

  • CMSD

    -0.1960

    23.764

    -0.82%

  • BTI

    0.4900

    37.06

    +1.32%

  • BP

    0.2300

    31.36

    +0.73%

  • AZN

    0.2750

    68.475

    +0.4%

Argentina's dollar craze cools under greenback-loving Milei
Argentina's dollar craze cools under greenback-loving Milei / Photo: Luis ROBAYO - AFP/File

Argentina's dollar craze cools under greenback-loving Milei

"Dollars, selling dollars!" a money changer shouts to people streaming past in Buenos Aires' financial district.

Text size:

But there are no takers as Argentina's decades-long dollar craze finally shows signs of cooling.

Over years of high inflation and currency controls, Argentines lined up to trade their increasingly worthless pesos for dollars, propelling the US currency to a record 1,500 pesos on the black market on July 12.

But as the inflation rate slows under cost-cutting President Javier Milei -- from 25.5 percent in December 2023 to 2.4 percent in November 2024 -- the clamor for dollars has quieted, even after Milei pledged on the campaign trail last year to swap the peso for the greenback.

- Amnesty brings in billions -

Experts cite several reasons for the fall in demand for dollars. Milei's biting austerity measures have cratered Argentines' purchasing power, shattering their ability to save in hard American cash -- the preferred way to create a nest egg.

The experts also point to a tax amnesty launched by the government in July to encourage Argentines to deposit dollars that have been stashed under mattresses and floorboards, or tucked in safety-deposit boxes and offshore accounts.

The scheme has brought in $20 billion in deposits so far, helping ease a dollar shortage.

Meanwhile, the central bank has taken advantage of a stronger peso to build up its dollar reserves from $21 billion when Milei took power a year ago to $32 billion.

In a sign of how times have changed, the black market dollar rate, which at one point was double the official rate, is now nearly aligned with the official rate, at a little over 1,000 pesos to the greenback.

- Under the mattress -

Oscar, one of Buenos Aires' many black-market money changers -- they are dubbed "arbolitos,"or little trees, because they plant themselves in the street offering green notes -- told AFP that business has slowed dramatically.

"Up to a year ago I was conducting around 40 transactions in a six-hour period; now I have four, at most, in 10 hours," said Oscar, who works openly near the presidential palace but declined to give his full name due to the illegal nature of his work.

These days, his only customers for dollars are Bolivian and Peruvian migrant workers, who change small amounts to send home.

In scenes unthinkable just months ago, most of his Argentine customers are now offloading dollars -- because they need more pesos to pay bills that have soared since Milei took office and slashed energy and transport subsidies.

Retirees "walk the whole city center looking for the best deal" for pesos, Oscar said.

In the back room of her estate agency in the middle-class Caballito neighborhood, where she trades dollars on the black market, Fabiana is also struggling.

To compete, she offers home delivery service for well-off Argentines buying dollars to go on holiday abroad or for people cashing in savings in dollars, some of them "stained from having been kept under the mattress."

Money-changing is merely a source of "petty cash" these days, Fabiana said.

Most of her business comes from property sales, which are booming thanks to the amnesty, which also covers investments in real estate projects and certain property purchases.

- Impact on exports -

Experts warn the peso's strengthening against the dollar may be temporary if, as expected, the effects of the tax amnesty soon wear off or if Milei fails to secure a new cash injection from the International Monetary Fund.

The IMF said Thursday it was in talks with Argentina on a new program to replace a $44 billion loan agreement set to expire on December 31.

Economist Hernan Letcher credited the tax amnesty with helping stabilize demand for dollars, but said that program and any new IMF cash injection are one-off measures that do not resolve Argentina's currency woes.

"The amnesty dollars aren't yours (don't belong to the state) and you have to pay back the IMF dollars," he said.

Meanwhile, the strengthening of the peso risks hurting exports to Brazil, Argentina's biggest trading partner.

Brazil's currency, the real, fell to a record low against the dollar last week over concerns about its economy.

H.Hayashi--JT