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Argentina discourages foreign travel to protect its dollars

The Argentine Federation of Associations of Travel and Tourism Companies said it would evaluate a possible legal challenged to the measure, which it called ‘an attack against travel consumers and companies that, in the large majority, are small and medium sized’

Updated on: Nov 27, 2021, 13:53:37 IST
AP | Posted by , BUENOS AIRES, Argentina
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Argentina's government launched measures on Friday to discourage foreign travel as a way to protect the country's thin dollar reserves ahead of heavy debt payments.

Argentina discourages foreign travel to protect its dollars (Photo by Diogo Hungria on Unsplash)
Argentina discourages foreign travel to protect its dollars (Photo by Diogo Hungria on Unsplash)

The Central Bank banned use of credit card installment payments for airline flights and other tourist services abroad. While Argentines pay those in pesos, the local agencies must pay for most of those services by transferring dollars abroad.

“We have to advance in the agreement with the International Monetary Fund, which implies that the reserves not only have to be robust, but have to be sufficiently strong to undertake that negotiation," said government spokesperson Gabriela Cerruti.

Argentina has spent three years trying to renegotiate repayment terms on a $45 billion credit the IMF granted in 2018 and considers it vital to stabilizing an economy whose lengthy crisis has been hit as well by the pandemic.

The Argentine peso has fallen to historic lows against the dollar recently, aggravating the nation's persistent inflation.

The new measure appears to hit hardest at middle class Argentines who don't have the means to finance trips with a single payment.

The Argentine Federation of Associations of Travel and Tourism Companies said it would evaluate a possible legal challenged to the measure, which it called “an attack against travel consumers and companies that, in the large majority, are small and medium sized.”

Cerruti said the measure was temporary, but did not say how long it would last.

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This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.