A report said that a leading company is selling a folding chair …
Facundo Iglesia
Facundo Iglesia is an economics, finance and technology reporter for the Buenos Aires Herald. His work has appeared in The Guardian, Wired, Le Monde Diplomatique, Rest of World, Perfil, among many others. In 2021, he won the ESET Latin American Award for Journalism on Computer Security.
Teachers say many students saw the graffiti warning of mass shootings as teenage pranks, as authorities launched investigations
-
Specialists formally valued ‘Portrait of a Lady’ at 250,000 euros as legal proceedings over the work move forwards
-
Economy Minister Luis Caputo celebrated the news, saying that the Milei administration is ‘making Argentina great again’
-
Dollar & PesoEconomics
Tourism statistics show Argentines flocking to Brazil, belying state’s narrative
Brazil received 72% more Argentine visitors last year, undermining claims that the key beach resorts of Buenos Aires province are flourishing
-
Analysts warn low oil prices as a result of Trump’s operation could cause a ‘negative shock’ for Vaca Muerta
-
Analysts warn low oil prices, as a result of Trump’s operation, could generate a ‘negative shock’ for Vaca Muerta
-
Impact on prices was moderate as markets treated the bill’s approval last Friday as a done deal
-
Economy Minister Luis Caputo announced the manoeuvre in July 2024 but provided no further information
-
Human rightsJudiciary
‘Doctor K,’ a dictatorship-era convicted torturer, granted parole in Argentina
Eduardo Kalinec had been sentenced to life in prison in 2010 for his role in three clandestine detention centers
-
International relations
How shifting geopolitics could shape the fate of 6 Brazilians detained in Argentina
Bolsonaro supporters who fled Brazil are facing extradition — and feeling betrayed both by Milei and Trump
-
BusinessEconomics
Argentina records negative foreign investment for the first time in over two decades
A top Canadian fertilizer company is the latest to leave Argentina, amid a wave of foreign companies selling their operations to local businesses