
A woman walks past a supermarket with a sign advertising discounts on meat in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Thursday, Jan. 17, 2013. (Photo: AP)
(TheBlaze/AP) — Argentina announced a two-month price freeze on supermarket products Monday in an effort to stop spiraling inflation.
The price freeze applies to every product in all of the nation’s largest supermarkets – a group including Walmart, Carrefour, Coto, Jumbo, Disco and other large chains. The companies’ trade group, representing 70 percent of the Argentine supermarket sector, reached the accord with Commerce Secretary Guillermo Moreno, the government’s news agency Telam reported.
The commerce ministry wants consumers to keep receipts and complain to a hotline about any price hikes they see before April 1.
Polls show Argentines worry most about inflation, which private economists estimate could reach 30 percent this year. The government says it’s trying to hold the next union wage hikes to 20 percent, a figure that suggests how little anyone believes the official index that pegs annual inflation at just 10 percent.
Economist Soledad Perez Duhalde of the abeceb.com consulting firm predicted on Monday that the price freeze will have only a very short term effect, noting that similar moves in Argentina have failed to control inflation in the past. Consumers shouldn’t be surprised if the supermarkets are slow to restock their shelves and offer fewer products for sale, she added.
A more effective way to contain inflation would be to “reduce government spending, which is financing an expansion of the money supply, and to have a credible price index.”

Argentina’s President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner delivers a speech during a ceremony at the Casa Rosada on December 27, 2012 in Buenos Aires. (Photo: AFP/Getty Images)
The government announced the price freeze on the first business day after the International Monetary Fund formally censured Argentina for putting out inaccurate economic data. The IMF has given Argentina until September to bring its inflation and economic growth statistics up to international standards. If Argentina doesn’t comply, it could face expulsion from the world body in November.
President Cristina Fernandez and her economy minister, Hernan Lorenzino, responded over the weekend with a flurry of attacks on the IMF, saying the agency’s data-gathering efforts had lost credibility in the lead-up to Argentina’s historic 2001 debt default. They said IMF advice also is leading Europeans astray by favoring big banks over measures that can grow economies out of crisis.
However, Lorenzino also said that the government will begin using a new inflation index starting in fourth-quarter 2013 – just in time for the IMF’s decision.
The IMF censure “is not just a new error … it’s also a clear example of the organization’s unequal treatment and double standards in regard to certain member countries,” Lorenzino said. “Argentina, just as it agreed with the IMF to do, will keep working to improve its statistical procedures in accordance with good international standards.”
“Later this year, the new General Household Spending Survey will enable the tracking of spending in Argentine households nationwide” and generate a new national consumer price index whose design was agreed to by IMF technical experts, he said.
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Comments (42)
VetMike
Feb. 5, 2013 at 8:39amComing to your town soon.
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The_Fifth_Column
Feb. 5, 2013 at 11:47amIt’s already here more than you think. Drink Milk!
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Willik
Feb. 5, 2013 at 8:14amI saw FDR mentioned. What about Nixon? I think he tried wage and price controls or some such, back in the ’70s and it fell flat on its petard.
Who the Hell is teaching these ‘economists’ and presidential fiscal ‘advisors’ Economics?
Obviously the ‘teachers’ are a dismal failure.
These people in a position of power try and try again to enact proven failed policies.
Hitting ‘Redial’ for a wrong number STILL doesn’t work, you educated FOOLS!!!
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battles
Feb. 5, 2013 at 8:12amSee. Richard Nixon was right!
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Ben__Franklin
Feb. 5, 2013 at 7:32amSimple Economics, If you freeze the price of food – there will be no food unless you freeze the price of gasoline, Freeze the price of the food from the Manufacturers, Freeze the wages of the chain of workers, Freeze the price of the crops coming from the fields, Force the farmers to work the land.
This is Communism and it will fail like every other time in history it was implemented.
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escape_from_socialism
Feb. 5, 2013 at 8:36amsecond that
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mdavid
Feb. 5, 2013 at 1:41amKirchner: Yeah, so our country isn’t doing to well, but guess what? It’s all the Malvinas’ fault! Let’s invade them!
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TRUTHandFREEDOM
Feb. 5, 2013 at 5:24amIt’s the FDR model. Government mandated price controls. FDR was oppressive and unsuccessful. Only the war and FDR’s passing while in office helped us climb out of that mess. It’s a pretty bad leadership record when the best thing that you can do to stabilize your country’s economy is leave, but we all know that he wasn’t the last to give us that kind of leadership. As bad as Obama land feels, I can’t imagine the patriot’s despair in seeing a Woodrow Wilson administration and FDR win a 4th term within your lifetime! We’ll get through this, but Argentina may be a sign of things to come. O is for Oppression.
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Beachmastermax
Feb. 5, 2013 at 12:52amFreeze the price and there will be no food, idiots.
If the price of fuel doubles who is going to drive the food to market if they can’t recoup the cost?
Who will run their tractor?
All inflation is is a big sign saying…”your standard of living is dropping and there is NOTHING you can do about it”.
Can you say John Galt?
This is what happens when you covet, steal and murder. The food runs out.
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Lord_Frostwind
Feb. 5, 2013 at 3:32amAs always, the downfall of these plans will be their failure to acknowledge human nature, or even basic economic practice for that matter.
Yet, they shall do it regardless because they are blind to the other options before them. It is likely that Argentina will not see the cataclysm coming before it is too late.
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escape_from_socialism
Feb. 5, 2013 at 8:42amCommies only know one thing, lie. They use lie to get elected, but they have no idea how economy works. They think, they can issue a bunch of regulation to fix the problem. But they are the problem, and they will never learn.
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Winedude
Feb. 4, 2013 at 11:15pmI have family in Buenos Aires and have been traveling regularly down there since 2006. The first time I went it was dirt cheap to travel and live down there. They were coming out of the financial fiasco of pegging the Argentine Peso to the dollar of 4 year prior and things seemed to be going well. Fast forward to December 2012. The official exchange rate is 4.98 peso/$ now, up from 3/dollar back in 2006. The “Blue” dollar, exchanged on the street is a bit under 8 pesos/$. The official inflation rate that the government down there calculated for 2012 was about 10.55%. The reality is that it is far closer to 25-40%, depending on the product and place. I about chocked when I had to pay about $30 equivalent for a 4 Kg. (about 10 lb.) turkey to celebrate American Thankgiving…
For what it’s worth, family I have in Argentina is planning on leaving (for good) sometime this spring, things are so bad there. As bad as you may think things are here, they’re SO much worse in Argentina that it’s hardly worth comparing. But our economy is in great shape by comparison…
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Beachmastermax
Feb. 5, 2013 at 1:00amNot for long.
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Beachmastermax
Feb. 5, 2013 at 1:04amGet ready to be A-No. 1 in “Emporer of the North”.
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rsanchez1
Feb. 4, 2013 at 10:18pmThis isn’t the first time it’s happened to Argentina. The people like to have the facade of capitalism, and the ruling class is willing to give it to them every once in a while, only to have socialism forced upon the people just enough for them to get more comfortable with it. It will take one or two more boom-bust cycles before Argentina completely abandons capitalism and repeats the same mistakes of the former Soviet Union, along with Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, and Nicaragua.
And soon after that, the United States.
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UNALIEN
Feb. 4, 2013 at 8:08pmSo, all the way back in 2012 the Progressive hero and Socialist NeoKeynesian god and Economist impostor Saint lunatic Paul Krugman was praising Argentina,,
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/05/03/down-argentina-way/
“Down Argentina Way
Matt Yglesias, who just spent time in Argentina, writes about the lessons of that country’s recovery following its exit from the one-peso-one-dollar “convertibility law”. As he says, it’s a remarkable success story, one that arguably holds lessons for the euro zone.
I’d just add something else: press coverage of Argentina is another one of those examples of how conventional wisdom can apparently make it impossible to get basic facts right. We keep getting stories about Ireland’s recovery when there is, in fact, no recovery — but there should be, darn it, because they’ve done the “right” thing, so that’s what we’ll report.
And conversely, articles about Argentina are almost always very negative in tone — they’re irresponsible, they’re renationalizing some industries, they talk populist, so they must be going very badly. Never mind this:”
he has a wonderful GDP chart as well…
sorry Krugs, GDP is phoney when you printing money…
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matamoros
Feb. 4, 2013 at 5:49pmOur own gvt is printing $85 billion dollars per month (QE3 plus QE4), and our bureaucrats and politicians actually think this will make things better. Insane!!! I hope you, my fellow patriots, are preparing for what’s coming. And oh yes, it’s coming. There is no way any country can sustain this kind of ponzi scheme.
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Detroit paperboy
Feb. 4, 2013 at 5:49pmWow shock !!!!!!!!!! Socialism failed again ???? UN REAL …………..
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mash4077
Feb. 5, 2013 at 7:16pmcomrade whoopi goldberg said it made perfect sense on paper.
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RaydocX
Feb. 4, 2013 at 5:47pmwatch what happens, gang… how far behind this are we *and we don’t have an island we can threaten to ‘retake’ to distract the population at large*
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vic138
Feb. 4, 2013 at 5:40pmBernanke and Barry must be so proud of themselves. Starving the worlds people to prop up the stock market and to keep the US interest on the debt serviceable (zirp). Exporting inflation, worse than wars.
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NoMoMrNiceGuy
Feb. 4, 2013 at 5:37pmComing soon to a theater near you ! Runaway Inflation – A real blockbuster – Hang on kids it is going to get bumpy
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Cavallo
Feb. 4, 2013 at 4:57pmShortages! Starvation… coming soon to the ObamaNation as well.. pay attention, what they have done we are doing. The destination is the same.
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Zipit
Feb. 4, 2013 at 5:38pmThat’s the progressive solution CAV! Locate failure and run as fast as you can towards it!!! Once you get there, embrace it, and even double down on it, all the while denying that you are failing! Then when it is clear that things are beyond hope, blame someone else for your failures!!! Sound familiar?
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Fubared
Feb. 4, 2013 at 5:46pmThe Spanish at least have fun during their riots. Es muy divertad. They may be napping currently, but check back later for blac block crap.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-02-04/madrid-protests-return-live-stream
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Chuck7884
Feb. 4, 2013 at 4:55pmThis not to mention war rhetoric with The U.K.over the Falkland Islands. important to us in America Why U.K. has downsized there military so low they may not have the resources needed to defend the Falkland Islands.
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Magyar
Feb. 4, 2013 at 4:53pmArgentina is a nation BLESSED with abundant natural resources and CURSED with a long line of Socialist/Communist leaders. The Perons sealed Argentina’s fate and now the after burn of decades of unions, uncontrolled spending and freebies— the money has run out! INFLATION!
WAKE UP AMERICA!
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circleDwagons
Feb. 4, 2013 at 5:22pm@Magyar, You are correct. Argentina is a beautiful country with many riches. The peronistas have brain washed the young, government dependence is high.
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WillG
Feb. 4, 2013 at 4:43pmEver closer we are becoming. Ever closer.
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KalanVA
Feb. 4, 2013 at 4:50pmI agree. The Govt is also trying to nationalize our 401k’s.
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steveinva
Feb. 4, 2013 at 4:38pmUnless they start tightening the money supply here, this is on the way…
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DougHuffman
Feb. 4, 2013 at 4:38pmSeek a caffeine substitute.
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2013-02-01/guatemala-coffee-institute-declares-emergency-over-rust-disease
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colascguy
Feb. 4, 2013 at 4:36pmWell imagine that. She already nationalized petrol giant YPF. She also nationalized the private pension savings of common people, the sum was $30 billion. Google he name for images and what do you see picture of her and Bumer hugging and smiling.
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Beachmastermax
Feb. 5, 2013 at 12:54amGet ready. They will be coming for 401 k’s here soon.
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BlackCrow
Feb. 4, 2013 at 4:36pmThis is smart! (sarcasm font) If I start loosing money selling something I quit selling it. Things will get hungry soon.
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mbean
Feb. 4, 2013 at 4:36pmPrinting worthless money leads to hyperinflation. But Obama says just keep borrowing spending and printing so he must be right as he is a demi god.
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Locked
Feb. 4, 2013 at 4:36pm“A more effective way to contain inflation would be to “reduce government spending, which is financing an expansion of the money supply…”"
WHAT A CONCEPT! Doubt that will happen though; even the US’s politicians never consider this these days, and we’re a “model for the world,” right? Sigh…
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KickinBack
Feb. 4, 2013 at 4:35pmLaws of economics need not apply. Sure, just cap the price, problem solved. And we’ll change 2+2 to equal 5 while we’re at it. Why you ask? Because…We’re the government! And we can do anything!
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