Steak-crazy Argentines keep buying beef even after peso crash inflates
prices
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[August 28, 2019] By
Hugh Bronstein and Marina Lammertyn
BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Times are hard in
recession-hit Argentina and the peso currency's latest crash has jolted
food prices higher.
But in a country where eating beef is considered more a right than a
luxury, people are stretching their budgets to keep buying steak while
butcher shops see profit margins shrink.
Social life revolves around weekend barbecues for Argentines, rich and
poor. The cherished image of the gaucho cowboy, wandering the pampas on
horseback and dining on top quality steak around the fire, is as much a
part of the nation's identity as the tango, Evita Peron, and financial
crises.
The latest economic setback occurred earlier this month when a landslide
victory for the populist opposition in an Aug. 11 primary vote sparked a
run on the peso and hobbled business-friendly President Mauricio Macri's
campaign to win a second term in October's presidential election.
Stunned by the peso's fall, Argentina's cattlemen - who export much of
their produce - pulled back from selling and waited for the volatility
to pass.
The supply cut had the effect of raising prices. Many Argentines kept
buying steak, nonetheless, opting to cut household budgets in other
areas before depriving themselves of their main source of protein.
"Argentines can stop buying clothes and other items but they won't stop
buying meat, even while they complain about prices," said Orlando Mamani,
working a meat counter in a grocery store in the Buenos Aires
neighborhood of Belgrano.
And complain they did, even as they lined up to buy at butcher shops
across the capital.
"Prices are up 15% to 20% since the primary. The election result was
really a surprise," said Julio Basmagian, 70, as he left a butcher's
store with purchases under his arms.
"Beef for us is very important. It's very unusual for an Argentine to
get through a day without eating beef in one form or another."
But as a retiree living on a fixed income, Basmagian said he may have to
cut back if prices keep rising. "I just don't have the budget," he said.
Consumer price inflation is expected at more than 3% this month, Macri
said on Tuesday, up from 2.2% in July. But meat price increases seem to
be outpacing inflation, according to consumers and butchers interviewed
by Reuters. Official price data for August will not be available until
next month.
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A man looks at meat on
display inside a butcher shop in Buenos Aires, Argentina October 29,
2018. Picture taken October 29, 2018. REUTERS/Marcos Brindicci
With Argentina's main parties having already chosen their presidential
candidates, the primary served as an opinion poll ahead of October's election.
Macri's poor performance caused an 18% slide in the peso, raising default fears
by making it harder for Argentina to honor its dollar-denominated debts. It has
revived memories of Argentina's 2001-2002 default and economic crisis, which
tossed millions of middle-class Argentines into poverty.
GIZZARD KING
"It is not that meat is very expensive. It's that wage earners believe it is
very expensive because they believe they have the right to eat beef every day,"
said Miguel Schiariti, head of Argentina's CICCRA meat industry chamber.
Schiariti said supply had dropped 30% at Buenos Aires' main livestock market of
Liniers after the primary.
"When prices go up like this, everyone complains, including me," said butcher
Miguel Narciso, 57, while he cut thin slices of beef used to make the popular
local dish milanesa.
"The demand is always there. But supply goes down when ranchers get nervous
about the peso and wait to see what's going to happen before selling," said
Narciso, his white apron splattered with blood at a butcher shop called Nucho in
the middle-class Buenos Aires neighborhood of Caballito.
His boss, Carlos Principe, the capital's self-anointed "Gizzard King" -
emblazoned in red letters on the shop's overhead sign - has heard complaints
from clients over rising prices since the primary threw Argentine politics on
its head.
"Ranchers cut back livestock supply due to the uncertainty, so livestock prices
rose 18%. But I can't raise my retail price by more than about 10% without
losing customers," Principe said.
"So we are losing money for now but what am I gonna do? I have a business to
maintain and employees who have to keep working."
(Reporting by Hugh Bronstein and Marina Lammertyn; Additional reporting by
Miguel Lobianco; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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