Anonymous 04/03/2024 (Wed) 01:59 No.53306 del
>>53303
Yeah. It's not just cars, it's houses too. First they made them unaffordable for the masses, now they're taking them away retroactively. What's happening in Argentina (and to me in particular) smells like a very deliberate part of a plan to kill off the middle class. Buying a house costs at the very least $50-60k for the cheapest mud huts in favela tier towns. Most people make around $5-8k a year and have zero margin for saving any part of it because they necessarily need to spend all of it on food, rent and other essentials. So buying a house is quite literally impossible for most; wages would need to arbitrarily increase tenfold. But then, OTOH, people that do own houses (through inheritance, from back when it WAS possible for the middle class to buy them) will make no more than $1-2k a year from renting them out. So neither party wins. Only the rich do; for them the price of any property in Argentina is spare change