Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Like James Bond,' Argentine price spies fight inflation

EUR -
AED 4.031463
AFN 75.175613
ALL 99.057387
AMD 424.691396
ANG 1.977123
AOA 1001.553265
ARS 1069.873285
AUD 1.623537
AWG 1.977038
AZN 1.868052
BAM 1.956731
BBD 2.215064
BDT 131.092397
BGN 1.955685
BHD 0.413731
BIF 3174.786107
BMD 1.097592
BND 1.430687
BOB 7.59665
BRL 6.032036
BSD 1.097012
BTN 92.124269
BWP 14.510973
BYN 3.589947
BYR 21512.811648
BZD 2.211191
CAD 1.494839
CDF 3155.578498
CHF 0.938047
CLF 0.036849
CLP 1016.777014
CNY 7.705256
CNH 7.753267
COP 4625.8033
CRC 570.429936
CUC 1.097592
CUP 29.086199
CVE 110.692504
CZK 25.363164
DJF 195.064407
DKK 7.455832
DOP 66.185026
DZD 145.856856
EGP 53.119193
ERN 16.463886
ETB 132.146416
FJD 2.462664
FKP 0.835881
GBP 0.838555
GEL 3.012907
GGP 0.835881
GHS 17.435243
GIP 0.835881
GMD 75.734154
GNF 9466.734641
GTQ 8.489079
GYD 229.418153
HKD 8.52432
HNL 27.417791
HRK 7.462543
HTG 144.669519
HUF 401.943801
IDR 17288.178381
ILS 4.166313
IMP 0.835881
INR 92.159293
IQD 1437.297288
IRR 46194.914385
ISK 148.493082
JEP 0.835881
JMD 173.45256
JOD 0.777868
JPY 162.549596
KES 141.589809
KGS 92.964148
KHR 4459.518272
KMF 492.050121
KPW 987.832566
KRW 1474.275427
KWD 0.336368
KYD 0.914239
KZT 531.968359
LAK 24223.865516
LBP 98344.282276
LKR 321.849735
LRD 211.889847
LSL 19.18625
LTL 3.240905
LVL 0.663923
LYD 5.229973
MAD 10.781104
MDL 19.275262
MGA 5006.119249
MKD 61.620189
MMK 3564.937401
MNT 3729.619031
MOP 8.776638
MRU 43.629149
MUR 51.125723
MVR 16.848248
MWK 1905.420734
MXN 21.162559
MYR 4.696052
MZN 70.139984
NAD 19.1862
NGN 1777.674811
NIO 40.336338
NOK 11.676112
NPR 147.387411
NZD 1.789081
OMR 0.422602
PAB 1.097037
PEN 4.099177
PGK 4.371437
PHP 62.375632
PKR 304.636886
PLN 4.323186
PYG 8553.071083
QAR 3.995511
RON 4.97769
RSD 117.026427
RUB 105.583134
RWF 1465.285895
SAR 4.122506
SBD 9.086653
SCR 14.790685
SDG 660.197392
SEK 11.359999
SGD 1.430948
SHP 0.835881
SLE 25.077027
SLL 23015.958838
SOS 626.7255
SRD 34.552762
STD 22717.947291
SVC 9.599569
SYP 2757.733841
SZL 19.186264
THB 36.758547
TJS 11.672503
TMT 3.852549
TND 3.369592
TOP 2.570675
TRY 37.60727
TTD 7.438999
TWD 35.274758
TZS 2990.939477
UAH 45.200344
UGX 4031.937485
USD 1.097592
UYU 45.731767
UZS 14049.182769
VEF 3976086.242704
VES 40.603655
VND 27280.659873
VUV 130.308378
WST 3.070474
XAF 656.272361
XAG 0.034638
XAU 0.000415
XCD 2.966299
XDR 0.816029
XOF 655.813924
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.6806
ZAR 19.067173
ZMK 9879.651032
ZMW 29.077238
ZWL 353.424315
  • RBGPF

    -1.1600

    58.94

    -1.97%

  • JRI

    -0.1000

    13.18

    -0.76%

  • SCS

    -0.0200

    12.95

    -0.15%

  • BCC

    2.3700

    141.27

    +1.68%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    24.57

    -0.53%

  • AZN

    -0.6000

    76.87

    -0.78%

  • BTI

    -0.0900

    35.2

    -0.26%

  • GSK

    -0.1900

    38.63

    -0.49%

  • NGG

    -1.0200

    65.48

    -1.56%

  • RELX

    -0.2500

    46.04

    -0.54%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    33.53

    -0.54%

  • RIO

    -0.0800

    69.62

    -0.11%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    6.88

    -1.45%

  • BP

    0.2600

    33.14

    +0.78%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    9.69

    +0.31%

  • CMSD

    -0.0230

    24.79

    -0.09%

'Like James Bond,' Argentine price spies fight inflation
'Like James Bond,' Argentine price spies fight inflation / Photo: JUAN MABROMATA - AFP

'Like James Bond,' Argentine price spies fight inflation

Like a veritable undercover agent, Monica Schenone tries to pass unnoticed through the aisles of a supermarket in Buenos Aires, sneaking photographs of price tags.

Text size:

The 52-year-old homemaker is part of a group of ordinary Argentines who volunteer their time to police stores' adherence to price limits suggested by the government to curtail spiraling inflation.

She feels "like James Bond," Schenone says, as she tries to blend in with shoppers in the capital of Argentina -- which in 2022 recorded its highest inflation rate in three decades at 94.8 percent -- one of the highest in the world.

Prices for daily staples rose monthly, even weekly in 2022, with milk prices climbing more than four-fold and those for cooking oil and sugar more than five-fold, according to the Abeceb economic consultancy.

In a bid to rein in galloping price rises, the government's "Precios Justos" (Fair Prices) program applies a 3.2-percent monthly price hike limit to some 2,000 essential products including flour, rice, milk and sunflower oil.

"I am in shock," Schenone told AFP as she exited a supermarket in the San Cristobal neighborhood where she had executed a covert price check she said left her horrified.

"A bar of soap that went from 231.40 pesos to 496 pesos, that does not seem to me to be a three percent increase," she said.

"It seems to me that we are still being taken for fools."

Precios Justos runs from February to the end of June, and covers food and medicines but also soap, clothing, shoes, and school gear, among other items.

Joining is voluntary, but producers and vendors who do sign up to the price agreement risk fines for non-compliance of up to 71 million pesos (some $370,000 at Tuesday's exchange rate) from Argentina's ministry of commerce.

Precios Justos, states the government, "aims to reduce inflationary expectations and... recover the purchasing power of the population’s income."

All major supermarket chains as well as Argentina's massive COPAL food and drinks producers' group have signed up to the program.

But most smaller, independent stores which serve millions of Argentines remain outside of the framework, sometimes charging prices double the suggested rate, according to consulting firm Nielsen IQ.

- 'Impotence' -

Schenone and about two dozen others members of an activist group called "La Dignidad" (Dignity) have taken it upon themselves to check up on Precios Justos compliance in Buenos Aires.

She said they regularly observe serious breaches.

Most often, price-controlled products are simply not stocked, but there are also many cases of prices above the agreed limit, she said.

"What I feel is a lot of impotence, a lot of anger. I feel that, as always, those of us in the lower classes continue to be screwed," Schenone told AFP.

The price checker and her peers submit their findings to La Dignidad, which publishes periodic reports.

There is also a government-sponsored app for consumers to report violations.

But opponents of the government's plan question the efficacy of price freezes, calling instead for macroeconomic measures such as slashing money printing and public spending.

Argentina has been grappling with an economic crisis for years, registering double-digit inflation in each of the last 12 years.

The causes are multiple, including persistent deficit spending, constant currency devaluation, successive droughts and external factors like the war in Ukraine that affected energy and grain prices.

Economy Minister Sergio Massa has said inflation is the "biggest poverty factor" in Argentina and "one of the main issues to fight."

For the month of January, inflation came in at 6.0 percent from December, and at 98.8 percent compared to the same month a year ago, according to data released Tuesday by the INDEC statistics institute.

For food and non-alcoholic drinks, prices rose 6.8 percent from December to January, and by 98.4 percent from a year earlier.

(O.Joost--BBZ)