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Argentina Inflation Near 300% Wipes Out Tourists’ Deep Discounts

(Bloomberg) -- Argentina’s surging inflation threatens to crimp a key source of tourism revenue as foreigners who piled $3.2 billion last year into the country that’s short on dollars opt for other destinations.

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Scenes of South Americans pouring in from air, land and sea to take advantage of Argentina’s cheap cost of living in recent years have partly reversed since President Javier Milei took office in December. Now Argentines are lining up to cross the border into Chile as consumer spending plunges at home, while annual inflation accelerated to 288% in March, up from 104% a year ago.

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Travel reservations in Uruguay to Argentina started to drop in January and are now 50% lower than a year ago, said Gonzalo Rodriguez who runs travel agency Carrasco Viajes in Montevideo. Rodriguez sees the drop influenced by Milei’s 54% currency devaluation and narrowing of the difference between the official and parallel exchange rates, a factor that made Argentina very affordable for foreigners but isolated the economy and previous government.

Read more: Argentina’s Neighbors Flood Borders for Cheap Ski, Shops, Steaks

“It becomes a less attractive destination with the gap between the official and parallel exchange rates almost gone and the noticeable rise in prices,” he said. “Argentina is starting to have prices like Brazil, Chile and other alternative destinations in the region.”

In recent years, Argentina had become popular among digital nomads, Russians escaping war and ordinary tourists from neighboring countries doing grocery shopping, forcing some supermarkets to set purchasing limits after shelves were emptied. For example, visitors from Uruguay, a country of 3.4 million people, spent about $1.2 billion in Argentina last year.

But since Milei ditched price controls and devalued the currency, many goods in Argentina, when measured in U.S. dollars, have recorded such steep price hikes that it’s no longer a bargain for foreigners.

A basket of 60 basic goods cost 33% less in the Argentine border city of Concordia than in the neighboring Uruguayan metro area of Salto, down from 64% last September, according to a survey by Uruguay’s Catholic University.

Read more: Argentina Runs Out of Bug Spray Amid Record Dengue Surge (1)

Less spending by foreign visitors could widen a tourism services deficit that topped $1.2 billion last year due to wealthy Argentines’ penchant for international travel offsetting all the incoming tourism. Every dollar counts as the Milei administration rebuilds the central bank’s depleted hard currency reserves to stabilize the economy and speed the flow of badly needed imports.

Tour sales to Argentina, especially shorter trips to Buenos Aires, have fallen as much as 20% from a year ago at Montevideo-based Cisplatina Turismo, Chief Executive Officer Laura Leiza said.

“It’s still cheaper to have dinner in Buenos Aires than in Montevideo,” Leiza said. “But if Argentina starts to get expensive, it will compete with the weather and beaches of Brazil.”

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