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    Argentines flock overseas as peso strengthens

    VIÑA DEL MAR, Chile (AP) – On a recent hot summer day in Chile, the beaches of Viña del Mar, Concón and Reñaca are packed with holidaymakers sharing yerba mate teas and playing ball. Others mill about in the shopping centres on the coast and in the capital, some wearing shirts with Lionel Messi’s name on them, carrying bags full of clothes, video games and mobile phones.

    They are part of a wave of Argentines who have found Chile to be a budget-friendly paradise this southern summer.

    “Everything here is so cheap for us,” said Cristian Vázquez, who was enjoying the sea in Reñaca, on Chile’s central coast.

    In December 2024, the start of the Southern Hemisphere’s summer, more Argentines went on vacation abroad than in the previous year, with Chile, Brazil, and Uruguay as the top destinations.

    Despite a year of economic crisis, Argentines are flocking to beaches, mountains and shopping centres abroad, encouraged by a favourable economic outlook – and a strong peso.

    ABOVE & BELOW: Argentines on vacation share a yerba mate tea in Vina del Mar, Chile; and an Argentine tourist shops with friends at a mall in the seaside town of Renaca in Vina del Mar. PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP

    Between December 2023 and the same month in 2024 the Argentine peso appreciated by around 41 per cent against the official United States (US) dollar, thanks in part of a strong adjustment plan implemented by President Javier Milei, an ultra-liberal who came to power at the end of 2023 on vows to “blow up” the central bank, take an axe to the bloated government and kill sky-high inflation.

    The stampede of Argentines traveling abroad for their summer vacations is driven by several factors, including the recent devaluation of various foreign currencies, the convenience of nearby destinations accessible by car and the prohibitively high cost of domestic vacations, especially along the Argentine Atlantic coast.

    Argentine tourism abroad surged in December, with departures up 76.4 per cent year-over-year to 1.3 million travellers compared to the same month the previous year, according to official figures. Of those, 80.7 per cent visited neighbouring countries, primarily Chile (28 per cent), Brazil (22.6 per cent) and Uruguay (15.6 per cent).

    Chile has become a popular destination for Argentines, who made up 40 per cent of the 5.2 million visitors to the country in 2024 and early 2025. Chile’s strong economic position relative to Argentina has resulted in competitive prices, a major draw for Argentine tourists.

    Chile’s tourism undersecretary, Verónica Pardo, noted that visitors are also spending more than in previous years, averaging about USD63.3 per person per day. Argentine visitors aren’t confined to the sun-drenched beaches of the Chilean coast. Messi jerseys and mate gourds are also a common sight in other neighbouring countries.

    Nicolás Lentini, 37, recently arrived in Brazil, drawn by the devalued real and lower prices. “A week’s rent for four people in Argentina costs USD700,” he said, noting that he paid the same amount for 14 days in Búzios, a Brazilian resort east of Rio de Janeiro.

    “Besides, the beaches here are incomparable to ours, where it’s cold. Here, you can wear a T-shirt all day.”

    Brazil experienced a surge in tourism after the real depreciated by around 27 per cent in 2024, when it reached a record of 6.6 million foreign arrivals, with Argentines being the main visitors (1.9 million).

    Andrés Deyá, from Argentina’s federation of travel and tourism business associations, highlighted the challenges of competing with neighbouring countries like Brazil.

    “We can provide good services, financing tools, tourism quality and everything else,” he said, but “macroeconomic issues define where Argentines decide to travel.”

    After a four-year hiatus marked by the COVID-19 pandemic and a subsequent economic crisis, Luis Sánchez returned to the exclusive resort of Punta del Este, Uruguay.

    “We like it a lot… this year the prices aren’t as high as they’ve been,” said Sánchez, one of 309,570 Argentines who visited Uruguay between December 20, 2024, and January 13, 2025, representing nearly half of all visitors to the country, where the US dollar appreciated almost 13 per cent against the Uruguayan peso in 2024 compared to 2023.

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