Jago25
11-03-10, 09:39
I don't trust my bank back home. And I don't certainly don't trust the banks here after 2002.
How do you guys protect yourselves from this?
Do you keep an open return ticket handy or something like that?
Also central banks are no good for micropayments. Let's say I need to send $10 to a chica from the US. I don't want to pay $20 to do it, and I don't want to be linked to that, for example.
There are alternatives but I haven't found anyone who uses them in Argentina yet.
As an aside for anyone interested here's what I think is true regards rules:
- you are only allowed to take in <$500 worth of gold before getting taxed (is that right? Really that low? How much tax)
- if you purchase land (for example, it is the law for the money to go through the central bank. I presume this gets monitored and then taxed at some rate.)
Regards real estate however, most Argentines when buying land I believe tend to go paying cash and advertise the actual price of land lower than it really was, hiding a percentage through as cash. Of course, it's much harder for a foreigner to do this so we have to pay a higher rate.
Some alternatives:
- keep the cash out of Argentina. Transfer it between accounts offshore, this could be in Uruguay. You could just have an account in Uruguay I suppose But I don't know anyone who does.
- egold / libertyreserve, pecunix, bitcoin. Things like that.
It's shame it's so shady but since there's no argentine paypal. There doesn't seem to be a more official way of doing the small payments even as well.
PMs welcome.
How do you guys protect yourselves from this?
Do you keep an open return ticket handy or something like that?
Also central banks are no good for micropayments. Let's say I need to send $10 to a chica from the US. I don't want to pay $20 to do it, and I don't want to be linked to that, for example.
There are alternatives but I haven't found anyone who uses them in Argentina yet.
As an aside for anyone interested here's what I think is true regards rules:
- you are only allowed to take in <$500 worth of gold before getting taxed (is that right? Really that low? How much tax)
- if you purchase land (for example, it is the law for the money to go through the central bank. I presume this gets monitored and then taxed at some rate.)
Regards real estate however, most Argentines when buying land I believe tend to go paying cash and advertise the actual price of land lower than it really was, hiding a percentage through as cash. Of course, it's much harder for a foreigner to do this so we have to pay a higher rate.
Some alternatives:
- keep the cash out of Argentina. Transfer it between accounts offshore, this could be in Uruguay. You could just have an account in Uruguay I suppose But I don't know anyone who does.
- egold / libertyreserve, pecunix, bitcoin. Things like that.
It's shame it's so shady but since there's no argentine paypal. There doesn't seem to be a more official way of doing the small payments even as well.
PMs welcome.