Berliner Boersenzeitung - World Cup run temporarily masks Argentina's inflation misery

EUR -
AED 4.018808
AFN 74.955074
ALL 98.474437
AMD 423.507022
ANG 1.972161
AOA 994.046216
ARS 1066.560294
AUD 1.628789
AWG 1.97223
AZN 1.85613
BAM 1.951704
BBD 2.209463
BDT 130.765558
BGN 1.955924
BHD 0.41232
BIF 3164.86833
BMD 1.094164
BND 1.427105
BOB 7.561131
BRL 6.124251
BSD 1.094214
BTN 91.907111
BWP 14.570222
BYN 3.581184
BYR 21445.607351
BZD 2.205771
CAD 1.500372
CDF 3149.003545
CHF 0.941473
CLF 0.037009
CLP 1021.186627
CNY 7.748427
CNH 7.755761
COP 4633.224993
CRC 565.014185
CUC 1.094164
CUP 28.995336
CVE 110.783859
CZK 25.354401
DJF 194.455148
DKK 7.458738
DOP 66.090769
DZD 145.938153
EGP 53.067487
ERN 16.412455
ETB 133.324065
FJD 2.436919
FKP 0.83327
GBP 0.837205
GEL 2.976022
GGP 0.83327
GHS 17.429856
GIP 0.83327
GMD 74.937809
GNF 9446.46266
GTQ 8.463238
GYD 228.920726
HKD 8.504195
HNL 27.354402
HRK 7.439231
HTG 144.2772
HUF 398.877416
IDR 17206.543867
ILS 4.124296
IMP 0.83327
INR 91.825003
IQD 1433.354369
IRR 46050.610776
ISK 148.510949
JEP 0.83327
JMD 172.905537
JOD 0.775432
JPY 163.173722
KES 141.146915
KGS 93.220398
KHR 4453.245671
KMF 492.319388
KPW 984.746656
KRW 1476.705059
KWD 0.335492
KYD 0.911811
KZT 536.573874
LAK 24159.132645
LBP 98037.061929
LKR 320.514396
LRD 211.172988
LSL 19.531128
LTL 3.230781
LVL 0.661848
LYD 5.240795
MAD 10.760551
MDL 19.28494
MGA 5005.798316
MKD 61.535767
MMK 3553.800823
MNT 3717.968001
MOP 8.763009
MRU 43.492578
MUR 50.35387
MVR 16.800891
MWK 1899.46805
MXN 21.302535
MYR 4.697793
MZN 69.71466
NAD 19.531069
NGN 1773.096818
NIO 40.243899
NOK 11.792972
NPR 147.051378
NZD 1.803675
OMR 0.421215
PAB 1.094303
PEN 4.094905
PGK 4.347167
PHP 62.460873
PKR 303.767211
PLN 4.300461
PYG 8530.097585
QAR 3.983576
RON 4.974836
RSD 117.042364
RUB 106.133893
RWF 1460.70846
SAR 4.108501
SBD 9.080822
SCR 14.705367
SDG 658.136663
SEK 11.372014
SGD 1.430449
SHP 0.83327
SLE 24.998688
SLL 22944.05883
SOS 624.767753
SRD 34.787866
STD 22646.978247
SVC 9.574817
SYP 2749.118901
SZL 19.213183
THB 36.697699
TJS 11.669549
TMT 3.840514
TND 3.36045
TOP 2.562638
TRY 37.479427
TTD 7.418431
TWD 35.279081
TZS 2981.595893
UAH 45.069699
UGX 4021.559811
USD 1.094164
UYU 45.05503
UZS 14005.295102
VEF 3963665.268385
VES 41.01228
VND 27173.554008
VUV 129.901306
WST 3.060882
XAF 654.583203
XAG 0.035887
XAU 0.00042
XCD 2.957032
XDR 0.814091
XOF 651.575521
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.951263
ZAR 19.296527
ZMK 9848.786923
ZMW 28.916312
ZWL 352.320246
  • RIO

    -0.3100

    66.35

    -0.47%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    24.52

    -0.49%

  • GSK

    2.2200

    40.24

    +5.52%

  • RBGPF

    -1.4700

    59.33

    -2.48%

  • SCS

    0.2500

    13.03

    +1.92%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    65.63

    -0.41%

  • BP

    -0.0500

    31.98

    -0.16%

  • BTI

    0.2600

    35.48

    +0.73%

  • AZN

    0.6350

    77.505

    +0.82%

  • BCC

    0.3700

    142.39

    +0.26%

  • CMSD

    -0.1715

    24.68

    -0.69%

  • RELX

    0.0700

    46.71

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    9.73

    +0.72%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.22

    +0.45%

  • BCE

    -0.2000

    33.31

    -0.6%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0700

    6.9

    -1.01%

World Cup run temporarily masks Argentina's inflation misery
World Cup run temporarily masks Argentina's inflation misery / Photo: Emiliano Lasalvia - AFP/File

World Cup run temporarily masks Argentina's inflation misery

Argentina's economy may be sinking but the entire country is buoyant, basking in the elation of its football team led by iconic captain Lionel Messi reaching the World Cup final.

Text size:

The dream of landing Argentina's third world title, 36 years after the last one, seems -- at least for now -- to have let Argentines forget their woes.

That number three seems significant today, and not just because Messi and his teammates seek to put a third championship star on the team's blue and white jersey.

Sporting glory arrives at a time when many people believe the inflation that has wreaked havoc on the South American nation's economy will reach a barely believable triple digits for 2022.

Last Thursday, the INDEC statistics institute published the price index for November, around six percent, suggesting inflation, which already stood at 88 percent over the last 12 months, is not decelerating.

Argentina has had double-figure inflation for decades.

But there is a genuine feeling that soccer success -- and that Messi magic -- can alleviate the pain of millions in a country where the poverty level is over 40 percent.

Before the tournament in Qatar began, Argentina's Labor Minister Kelly Olmos was even asked whether lowering inflation was more important than winning the World Cup.

"We must constantly work against inflation, but one month won't make a huge difference," she said.

"On the other hand, from a morale point of view, given what it means for all Argentines, we want Argentina to be champions," Olmos added. "The Argentine people really deserve some joy."

Predictably, that provoked a barrage of criticism.

- 'A relief' -

And yet Argentines crowd around television screens in droves to watch the team's matches, whether in bars, homes, even a Buenos Aires 'fan zone.'

Most of these fans could never dream of affording a ticket to Qatar in a country where the average wage is a meagre 66,500 pesos ($390).

"People are well aware of the problems" but football and the economic situation "are on parallel paths, they don't meet," Lucrecia Presdiger, a 38-year-old hospital worker, told AFP after Argentina's quarter-final victory over the Netherlands.

"Many people really need this joy and are making the most of it. But they don't take it literally, they know it's only football, they are perfectly aware of the problems," Presdiger said, adding: "You shouldn't take them for fools."

For designer Tony Molfese, an Argentina triumph would be "a relief, a breath of fresh air, a joy, even momentary -- and we deserve it."

Olmos drew parallels with Argentina's first World Cup success in 1978, when the country was run by a military dictatorship.

"We were under dictatorship, persecuted, we didn't know what tomorrow held, but Argentina became champions and we went out to celebrate in the streets," she recalled.

"And then we went back to the reality, which was unrelenting."

- 'Transient and eternal' -

Despite the great passions football inspires, it remains just a game, according to writer Ariel Scher.

"Football bestows individual and collective joy, but that joy is transient, it doesn't eliminate the other problems of existence," Scher, a university lecturer and football specialist, told AFP.

"It's like when our child passes an exam: we're delighted but that doesn't pay the bills."

The power of football is that "it gives us the possibility of a happiness that is both transient and eternal," added Scher.

"No problems will be resolved or eliminated but at the same time, even briefly, it dazzles us with something that leaves a lasting memory."

In a November poll, more than three quarters of Argentines said the country's fortunes at the World Cup would have an effect on people's morale.

Some 32 percent even said they thought the result would affect the next presidential election in 10 months time.

Political scientist Raul Aragon scoffed at such an idea.

Regardless of what happens in Sunday's final "the social mood will return to what it was before. And no political force could capitalise on any eventual victory."

(H.Schneide--BBZ)