Even amid economic woes, Argentines live it up
Nightlife thrives despite high unemployment and a deeply devalued currency.
By Brian Byrnes | Special to The Christian Science Monitor
BUENOS AIRES - Kicking back at a trendy Buenos Aires bistro, Federico With and Diego Castro look marvelous.
And looking good, whether or not they are feeling good, is an art many
residents of the world's ninth-largest city take seriously. The
Argentine capital boasts more plastic surgeons per capita than nearly anywhere
else on the planet. Even street performers who dance the
melancholy tango wear designer-label suits and skirts.
But feeling good has not been easy lately. Unemployment stands at 15 percent,
personal savings have been clobbered by currency
devaluation, and food shortages have led to rampant malnutrition.
Despite the bleak numbers, many Argentines are in surprisingly good spirits.
On a warm Thursday night in late summer here, Messrs. With
and Castro have joined thousands of other Portenos, as the Buenos Aires
locals are known, in the fashionable Las Canitas neighborhood,
where nightspots are packed with diners intent on dancing the night away.
"These days, it doesn't do me any good to save my money, because it could
lose its value again at any time," says Castro, an accountant.
"I am living for today."
This kind of attitude has always suited Argentines. It has provided them
a way to forget their troubles - a military dictatorship in the 1970s,
hyperinflation in the 1980s, today's economic stagnation.
But while some say a history of throwing caution to the wind has helped
breed decades of government mismanagement and corruption, it
has also created a rugged self-reliance that is helping the country weather
its latest storm.
"We have had crises here before, with the military and others," says Juan
Pedriel, a hotel manager. "But Argentines are very good at
adjusting."
Argentines have been doing a lot of adjusting over the past year or so.
Banking restrictions, implemented in December 2001 to limit
withdrawals, have been lifted, and people once again have access to their
savings - although few dare to put them back into the banks. An
estimated $20 billion to $30 billion is floating around the country, secured
in family lockboxes or stuffed under mattresses.
Most people cannot afford to buy new cars or apartments anymore, and trips
to the US or Europe are now three times as expensive. As a
result, much of the middle class now chooses to spend its disposable income
by pursuing leisure.
New nationalism
One of those benefiting from this trend is Isabel Aldao, owner of the La
Bamba Estancia, a traditional Argentine ranch 75 miles northwest of
Buenos Aires. In addition to a steady stream of foreigners for whom Argentina
has become an inexpensive vacation spot, Ms. Aldao says
the number of Argentines she has hosted in recent years has increased by
60 percent.
"Before, Argentines used to go to Punta del Este [a posh beach resort in
Uruguay] for the weekend. But now they have to pay $500 for
that, and they can't afford it," she says. "So they come here instead and
learn more about their own country."
Aldao says she has noticed a new sense of national pride among these Argentines,
who come to her ranch to ride horses with gauchos,
sip herbal mate tea, and eat juicy, homegrown steaks.
This new pride has been hard won. From 1976 to 1983, Argentina was ruled
by a military dictatorship that "disappeared" an estimated
30,000 people. Democracy was restored in 1983, but hyperinflation soon
followed, where the price of milk would often triple in a matter of
hours.
During the 1990s, Argentina enjoyed unprecedented growth and prosperity.
Luxury items like perfumes and Palm Pilots were available for
the first time. The telecommunications sector was privatized and upgraded,
catapulting Argentina into the Internet era. Airlines began
running shuttle flights between Buenos Aires and Miami, sending countless
Argentines to South Beach and Disney World.
What made much of this progress possible was the peso's one-to-one peg
with the dollar, an economic policy that would prove fatal for
South America's second-largest economy.
The peg kept the government from being able to print money to cover costs,
so instead it began unrestrained borrowing, saddling the
country with unmanageable debt.
The government has defaulted on this debt and floated the currency. The
peso has since lost 60 percent of its value and now trades around
three-to-one to the dollar.
Self indulgence the problem
Like many Argentines, With, a lawyer, has seen his life savings slashed
by two-thirds. But he is feeling better now with access to his
money, and a hint of economic stability has returned.
"After all that has happened this past year, I've finally said, 'Enough with this [stuff], I want to have a good time!' " he says.
But some argue that this fondness for indulgence is exactly what has caused
trouble for Argentina time and time again. Graciela Romer, a
sociologist in Buenos Aires, predicts this extravagant lifestyle will continue
to threaten the country.
"Argentines need to begin to see the value in saving money, not spending
money. This is a weakness of the Argentine culture," she says.
"Now people are spending more money because they want to gratify themselves."
Citizens go to the polls later this month to elect a new president, choosing
from a field of three lifetime politicians - including former
President Carlos Menem - and two relative newcomers. But with none of the
candidates capturing the public's imagination - none polls
above 21 percent - it seems that most people are skeptical that the politicians,
some of whom had a hand in causing the current crisis, can
repair the damage.
"People here can't plan for the future," says Castro, taking the last gulp
from his bottle. "This is not a moment to save, this is a moment to
enjoy."