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Argentina to seek looser foreign ownership rules for rural land

MilHojas

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Argentina to seek looser foreign ownership rules for rural land​


BUENOS AIRES, March 25 (Reuters) - Argentina's government will send a bill to Congress that ‌seeks to change the limits on foreign ‌ownership of rural land, Cabinet Chief Manuel Adorni said at a news conference on Wednesday, the latest step by the Milei administration to boost foreign investment in the country.

 

Argentina to seek looser foreign ownership rules for rural land​


BUENOS AIRES, March 25 (Reuters) - Argentina's government will send a bill to Congress that ‌seeks to change the limits on foreign ‌ownership of rural land, Cabinet Chief Manuel Adorni said at a news conference on Wednesday, the latest step by the Milei administration to boost foreign investment in the country.

What about the rumor that Milei is trying to let all the Israel people buy burned land in the South of Argentina? This wouldn't be good if it allows many people to come and steal land cheap. I don't know if true but heard some people setting the land on fire to buy cheaper.
 
What about the rumor that Milei is trying to let all the Israel people buy burned land in the South of Argentina? This wouldn't be good if it allows many people to come and steal land cheap. I don't know if true but heard some people setting the land on fire to buy cheaper.

I don't buy into that but you never know with Milei's wackiness to Israel. But I doubt it is some coordinated effort to allow Israeli's to live here. Hell, the residency and citizenship seem harder than ever with Milei. Makes no sense to me.
 
This won't have much effect on the typical Argy.

According to the National Rural Land Registry, foreigners own roughly 5% to 6% of Argentina's total rural land (about 16 million hectares). Of that specific 6% slice, nearly 80% is concentrated in the hands of just 253 individuals and multinational companies.

While it is not restricted to just 1,000 people, overall land ownership in Argentina is still drastically unequal. According to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and national census data, "non-family farms" (corporate or large-scale agribusinesses) make up about 23% of all farms but control roughly 79% of Argentina's agricultural land. Conversely, everyday family farms make up 75% of the agricultural operations but only hold about 18% of the land.

Historically, the relaxation of the 2011 Rural Land Law (which originally capped foreign ownership at 15% nationally and 1,000 hectares in prime zones) does not trigger a mass influx of middle-class foreign buyers. Instead, it paves the way for massive multinational corporations -such as mining conglomerates looking for lithium, or global agribusinesses to acquire huge tracts of land for resource extraction, effectively validating your point about exporting raw materials and keeping the wealth abroad.

That is what this new law is all about. The rich will get richer and foreign companies can come in and export the raw materials at low prices and keep the money outside of Argentina.
 
It will be a net positive to get foreigners in and investing in the land. Most land in Argentina is not productive and just sits there doing nothing. Land is only as valuable as someone that will invest in it and make it productive.
 
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