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peppertree

(21,650 posts)
Fri Jun 23, 2023, 06:30 PM Jun 2023

For second year running, Buenos Aires chosen as the best city to live in Latin America

Buenos Aires, Argentina, was distinguished by the English magazine The Economist as the city with best quality of life of Latin America, according to the 2023 edition of The Global Liveability Index ranking - which is taken every year.

Buenos Aires, with 3 million people in the city proper and another 12 million in 30 suburban counties, ranked very close to prestigious global cities such as New York, Rome, and Edinburgh - surpassing Abu Dhabi and Shanghai. Vienna once again topped the list.

The Global Liveability Index measures and evaluates the quality of life in cities through different categories.

While the city ranked 70th out of 173 cities surveyed, its average score of 82.4 was well above the Latin American average of 68.2. Buenos Aires got 100 points in education (the highest possible score), 85.9 in culture and environment, 85.7 in infrastructure, 83.3 in health, and 70 in stability.

The stability score was weighed down primarily by the country's 5 year-long foreign debt and currency crisis, which has resulted in 114% annual inflation as of May.

The nation's economy - and particularly Buenos Aires' - remains strong however: over last year, GDP was up 1.3% despite a severe drought; real supermarket sales are up 3.4%; auto sales, 11.8%; and real shopping center sales, 15.4%.

“Once again Buenos Aires has consolidated as one excellent city to live, visit, study and work,” the city's Foreign Affairs Secretary, Fernando Straface, noted.

“Today’s quality of life is a key factor in the competition to attract visitors and talent to cities. Along these lines, this ranking confirms why it is one of the most chosen metropolises by digital nomads in the world - and one of the best for international students in Latin America.”

At: https://euro.eseuro.com/local/513746.html

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For second year running, Buenos Aires chosen as the best city to live in Latin America (Original Post) peppertree Jun 2023 OP
The city reveals even more wonderful places each time I see new images from Buenos Aires! Judi Lynn Jun 2023 #1
Glad you liked it, Judi. To be sure, Argentina is a lot more diverse than it was up to the 1980s. peppertree Jun 2023 #2

Judi Lynn

(160,598 posts)
1. The city reveals even more wonderful places each time I see new images from Buenos Aires!
Sun Jun 25, 2023, 12:09 AM
Jun 2023

It's breathtaking. I think it's far too beautiful to have had such a monstrous Mayor as Mauricio Macri! He's certainly not good enough for a city like that, in my total view.

Unbelievable architecture, and the trendy places look fascinating. It certainly has its own vibe, its singular personality.

Truly loved the video you added, peppertree. Thank you!

On edit:

We met a journalist around 2000, on the CNN message board, around the time of Elian Gonzalez, who washed ashore in Miami from Cuba. This man, whose screen name was Charles Mirabal, I found out years later, had been a writer for the United Press International, (before it was purchased by the wealthy conservative Sun Myung Moon, friend of the late George H W Bush) and he had mentioned once around 2000 in a conversation with an Argentine Italian woman that Argentinian people seemed a lot more like Europeans than South Americans, and that they saw themselves as being more European. That really stuck with me all these years. They had been discussing Argentine soccer moments before.

The architecture, and city life most surely seem European. I think on your posted video the narrator seemed to cover it all in saying there was a ton of immigration early in the current culture.

Citizens of the city have every reason to be very proud to live there. It's beautiful!

Thanks, again.

peppertree

(21,650 posts)
2. Glad you liked it, Judi. To be sure, Argentina is a lot more diverse than it was up to the 1980s.
Sun Jun 25, 2023, 02:44 PM
Jun 2023

Argentina has never asked about ethnicity in its censuses - except, since 2010, when it comes to Afro-Argentines and the Indigenous (together they made up 3% of the total).

But that excludes mestizos (people with at least 1/3 Indigenous blood) - so all estimates as to the % of white Argentines have always been just that: estimates. It's certainly never been "97%" - that's for sure.

I remember Encyclopedia Britannica estimating it at 85% in the '80s - and that was probably about right, at the time.

Most every Argentine you met was Italian, Spanish, and often both - plus a scattering of other European and Middle-Eastern backgrounds, and often, an Indigenous forbear or two.

But since then, there've been perhaps two million+ immigrants from Bolivia, Paraguay, and Peru - plus, since 2015, Venezuela. And these tend to be mestizo.

Add to that a sizable East Asian immigration and others, and you could easily see in the crowds these days, if you were to visit, that Argentina's more diverse than it was 30-40 years ago - and certainly not 97% white.

And nowhere is this more evident than in Buenos Aires - whose suburbs already included millions of migrants from the poorer, mestizo-majority provinces in the north.

Indeed - and contrary to what right-wing Argentines might tell you - if you look at Buenos Aires footage from the "halcyon" dictatorship days, there was already a sizable mestizo minority. The crowds were whiter - but not that much.

1981:


2022:



Like the '50s in the U.S., there's been a concerted effort in Argentine right-wing media to mythologize the Videla years (doubly absurd since Ike was a statesman, and Videla was a fascist thug who derailed the economy - polite though he was).

Thanks again for your thoughts, Judi. Always rewarding and worth getting into. Have a great Sunday, and All the Best.
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