
The deep distrust driving Argentines to hoard ‘mattress dollars'
'I wouldn't even think of putting my savings in the bank,' the former lawyer told AFP at her modest apartment in Buenos Aires. She asked to use a fake name to shield herself from thieves.
Lopez is not alone. The government estimates there are about US$200 billion (RM846 billion) so-called 'mattress dollars' out there — five times the reserves of the Central Bank.
On Thursday, President Javier Milei's government launched a plan to encourage Argentines to bank these dollars, also commonly stashed under floorboards, in safety deposit boxes or offshore accounts.
Under the initiative, anyone can make a deposit of up to 100 million pesos (about US$90,000) without having to declare the provenance.
The goal is to boost foreign reserves, stimulate the formal economy and bolster the peso.
But Lopez remains sceptical.
'The one who kept his savings (in the bank) was my father, he always lost, it always went bad for him,' she said.
One of the worst moments, said Lopez, was in 2001 when the then-government put in place so-called 'corralito' (corralling) measures to limit cash withdrawals and freeze bank accounts.
That move, intended to limit capital flight in the midst of a prolonged recession, was widely considered draconian and the spark for protests that left 39 people dead and toppled a president.
Trafficking, corruption, smuggling?
Argentina has faced 16 economic crises since 1860. Lopez has lived through seven of them in the last 50 years.
Countless people lost life savings as the system collapsed over and over, inflation spiralled out of control, and governments imposed currency controls.
Their fingers burnt, many Argentines took to trading their battered pesos for whatever greenbacks they could lay their hands on, and hoarding them at home. In cash.
Now Milei wants that money to enter the system, saying in an interview Monday: 'I don't care in the slightest where the dollars come from.' His is not the first Argentine government to try this.
As long as the dollars are not in the system, explained economist Julian Zicari of the University of Buenos Aires, they 'do not contribute to (foreign) reserves nor generate lending capacity for banks.'
Self-declared anarcho-capitalist Milei has imposed strict budget-cutting measures on the South American country since taking office in December 2023, resulting in inflation dropping from 211 per cent to 118 per cent last year.
Maintaining a stable exchange rate is one of his chief goals.
Last year, a tax amnesty brought in billions of dollars in deposits and, in April, Argentina received a first tranche of US$12 billion from a new US$20 billion loan agreed by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Some fear the 'mattress dollar' concessions will abet money laundering, though the government has denied this.
'By not requiring justification of origin... the possibility is enabled for funds from drug trafficking, human trafficking, public corruption or smuggling to be incorporated into the formal system,' economist Pablo Tigani wrote in the Ambito newspaper.
In effect, he argued, it amounts to 'an amnesty for those who did not pay taxes, without any distinction between tax evasion, illicit enrichment, or even money laundering.'
Presidential spokesman Manuel Adorni insisted Thursday that those with undeclared funds 'are not criminals, they are the vast majority of Argentines who have been abused by excessive taxes and controls.'
Either way, Lopez insists nothing can get her to part with her pea can.
'One day the government tells you one thing and then another government comes in and does something else. I don't trust them. I wouldn't put my money in the bank,' she said. — AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
4 days ago
- The Sun
US court halts YPF share turnover in Argentina's $16.1bn dispute
NEW YORK: A US appeals court has temporarily halted an order requiring Argentina to surrender its 51% stake in YPF to satisfy a $16.1 billion judgment. The 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan paused the June 30 turnover ruling while Argentina contests the decision. The stay offers relief to President Javier Milei's government, which warned of economic instability if forced to relinquish control of YPF. Argentina is separately appealing the $16.1 billion award granted to Petersen Energia Inversora and Eton Park Capital Management in 2023. Burford Capital, the litigation funder backing the investors, stands to receive a portion of any damages recovered. Legal representatives for Petersen and Eton Park did not immediately comment on the ruling. The court's order did not explain its reasoning but is expected to remain in effect for several months. Argentina's next legal submission regarding YPF is due by September 25. The conflict traces back to Argentina's 2012 seizure of YPF from Spain's Repsol without offering minority shareholders a tender. Argentina claimed the shares were protected under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act. The US government supported Argentina, urging a cautious resolution to avoid straining diplomatic ties. Investors argued Argentina's prolonged evasion and a commercial activity exception justified the turnover. Judge Loretta Preska ruled in June that Argentina's control of YPF triggered the exception, dismissing claims that local laws could block the transfer. A government spokesperson welcomed the stay, expressing confidence the damages award would also be overturned. - Reuters


The Star
5 days ago
- The Star
Boom for the rich, bust for the rest
A man sleeping on the floor of a subway station in Buenos Aires. Inflation has cooled and luxury sales are soaring, but nine out of 10 Argentinian households are in debt. — AFP IN Javier Milei's Argentina, falling inflation has stimulated a boom in car and real estate sales and foreign-bound planes take off laden with tourists. But on the other side of a very complicated economic coin, consumption is dropping precipitously among low- and middle-income groups while more and more people work in precarious jobs and buy groceries on credit. Milei, who took office as president in December 2023, has partly succeeded in his quest to curb state spending and runaway inflation, which reached a five-year monthly low in May. But the price has been a devalued peso and deep cuts to state subsidies that made access to housing, healthcare and education prohibitively expensive for millions. Consumer spending dipped heavily last year and a tentative rebound has been unequal: spending on tangible assets such as apartments and cars has skyrocketed among the rich, while ever more poorer people can not afford shoes or food. Nine out of 10 Argentine households are in debt, official data shows. Even more have defaulted on a loan. 'Nothing is selling,' shoe store employee Laura Comiso said in downtown Buenos Aires after yet another afternoon without customers. But in San Andres de Giles west of the capital, car salesman Blas Morales waxed lyrical about 'an excellent June!' According to Sebastian Beato, president of Argentina's Acara car dealership association, the first half of 2025 was 'the best in seven years' with sales up nearly 80% from 2024. Under Milei's measures, loans have become cheaper, and Argentines have been encouraged by a tax amnesty to bring out billions of US dollars they had stashed under mattresses and floorboards, in safety deposit boxes and offshore accounts. Investment in real estate increased 22% year-on-year in Buenos Aires in May. In the first four months of 2025, more mortgages were taken out in Argentina than in all of 2024. 'The change in government has been very positive for this sector,' said third-generation real estate agent Diego Sardano. 'Under the previous government, we went months without making a single sale. Now we have about five sales per month,' he added. A stronger peso also benefits those travelling abroad but harms domestic tourism, with bookings plummeting. Between January and April, about six million Argentines travelled abroad – 70% more than in the same period in 2024. The country received only two million visitors at the same time, the lowest figure in a decade. Consumption is being driven largely by Argentina's upper class, which comprises no more than 6% of the population. Consulting firm Moiguer said in a recent report the economic recovery after months of recession was not benefiting everyone equally, and was exacerbating income inequality. Half of Argentines tell pollsters they cannot make ends meet, and a third delay planned purchases in order to pay for essentials. Sardano, the realtor, said he feared spending on homes and apartment may have peaked 'because people's purchasing power isn't increasing'. 'High-end car registrations are increasing while food consumption is falling. The middle class is being wiped out,' added Rodolfo Aguilar, head of the State Workers' Union (ATE) which has reported 40,000 job losses among its ranks under Milei. Fernando Savore, head of the Federation of Small Businesses in Buenos Aires province, said having a job no longer guarantees financial stability because wages have not kept pace with rising gas, electricity and transport prices, or school fees. 'Much of a worker's income goes toward these obligations. There are items that no longer sell, like candy and desserts,' he said. 'People only buy necessities like pasta and tomato puree, nothing more, and many are buying on credit.' — AFP


Free Malaysia Today
11-08-2025
- Free Malaysia Today
China reshuffles soy trade to counter local glut, US tensions
Global soyoil markets remain supported by strong biofuel demand in the US. (EPA Images pic) BEIJING : China has long worried about its shortage of soybeans, solidifying its status as the world's biggest buyer to the benefit of farmers from the US to Brazil. However, as its economy slackens, the country is quietly reshaping trade in the oilseed's products. The Asian nation is stepping up rare exports of soybean oil, as domestic consumers cut back on restaurant visits and rising global demand for biodiesel makes prices attractive enough to send it abroad. Meanwhile, China is testing deliveries of soybean meal from Argentina for the first time, a substitute for importing beans and crushing them into animal feed at home. Both shifts, while modest in volume, mark a departure from longstanding trade flows. They also include a means for the country to chip away at its need for American soybeans if the trade war between Beijing and Washington persists. China exported about 127,000 tonnes of soyoil in the first half of the year, exceeding full-year 2024 levels, according to customs data. The shipments are flowing to destinations including South Korea, Malaysia and India, where edible oil demand remains robust. The trend 'reflects a global supply-demand rebalancing in the vegetable oil market,' Fu Bo, a senior analyst at Guotai Junan Futures Co said in a note. 'The rising exports are the result of China needing soybean meal while other countries need soybean oil,' he said. Global soyoil markets remain supported by strong biofuel demand in the US, where about half of local production is used to produce renewable diesel. Meanwhile, domestic biofuel blending mandates and less competitive prices in South American nations such as Brazil and Argentina have limited additional supply. At home, China is grappling with the opposite problem: a glut. Commercial inventories of soyoil have surged 70% since May to an elevated level of 1.12 million tonnes, according to Shanghai-based commodities consultancy Mysteel. Chinese crushers have kept run rates high to ensure there's enough soymeal for livestock rations, creating the unusual arbitrage opportunity of exporting surplus oil from a country better known for its imports. On the meal front, China is exploring a new supply channel from Argentina. Bunge Global SA recently sold at least two shipments of the high-protein feed ingredient to Chinese buyers. Beijing approved Argentine soymeal back in 2019, during trade hostilities with the first Trump administration, but purchases didn't materialise until now. Argentina's move to reduce export tariffs has improved the competitiveness of its meal. However, the shipments also suggest that Chinese buyers are keen to hedge against uncertainty in US supplies as Beijing and Washington joust over trade once again. 'China has plenty of crush capacity,' said Arlan Suderman, chief commodities economist at StoneX Financial Inc. 'But its recent purchases of Argentine soymeal send a statement to the US that it's willing to sacrifice that capacity to avoid buying US soybeans if Brazil can't fully meet its needs,' Suderman said.