The Solution To Argentina's Banking Problems Is To Go Cashless
dkatana writes: There is no way back for Argentinian people to trust their own currency. Several governments have used the "Peso/Dollar" exchange to dig into people's savings, reward their friends and limit the freedom of citizens to use other currencies.
Short of Dollarizing the economy again, the only solution for the country is going cashless. People are desperate, and they're looking for alternatives such as mobile payments, Amazon gift cards and Bitcoin to store their savings away from government control. A digital currency could help curb black market exchanges, fight corruption and restore the country's image.
Short of Dollarizing the economy again, the only solution for the country is going cashless. People are desperate, and they're looking for alternatives such as mobile payments, Amazon gift cards and Bitcoin to store their savings away from government control. A digital currency could help curb black market exchanges, fight corruption and restore the country's image.
Cashless is a convenience. You need a currency. And once there is one, you're in the dollar world again.
"People are desperate...", maybe posting on SlashDot will help. or not.
once one country gets rid of cash, if it works, it'll avalanche. Goodbye to seignorage.
Liberty - Security - Laziness - Pick any two.
We've made very little progress in anonymising cashless transactions (and this proposal might rely on transactions never being anonymous).
This not only reduces people's privacy but also gives government officials a way to remotely block you from making any payments. That's severe.
Help build the anti-software-patent wiki
Bitcoin!!!
"People are desperate" lol
Argentina is a democracy. Vote the idiots out of power.
Just asking.
Money is a token for promises. Nothing more, nothing less. When confidence is lost, nothing can restore it (hyperinflation)
On the other hand, other parts of the world have an excess of trusted promises. These will dissapear (deflation).
A digital currency would take away what few freedoms the Argentine people have. The Argentine government will abuse a digital currency the way they have a paper one. Because they are deadbeats. They readily borrow money, and don't pay it back. Obama and his allies are trying to do the same thing.
Its just another bugging device...
You know it's bad when Bitcoin looks like a better alternative! O_O
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
if people will just keep spending money they will have more money to spend.
lose != loose
So no money can change hands without lots of technology and probably an internet connection.
How do you deal with small purchases from small vendors? An example would be a child's allowance.
You have no idea how creative the Argentine people are. Especially with inflation running about 30% per year. The official exchange rate is down to a little over eight pesos to the dollar while the "blue rate" is about 14 pesos to the dollar.
After a month in a Hotel in Mar del Plata, Argentina I paid not with cash or a credit card but with two cruise ship tickets that I bought online with my US credit card. The proprietor wanted to take the cruise after doing business in South Florida. He was heading to Miami with two suitcases stuffed with US dollars so he could add to his portfolio of rental condos. Did I forget to mention that he has both French and Argentine passports?
I've spent years in South America. This type of behavior is not exceptional in a country that has an extremely tenuous grip on reality.
Argentina needs a government that doesn't tax and borrow needlessly. However, this will be a great experiment for TPTB to see how to migrate to a truly cashless economy. Best to experiment on third world countries first before bringing the fireworks show to "established" countries. /sarc
The answer is to use gold and silver coins as money.
The problem is not having real money. The US founding fathers had just gone through a currency trust issue similar to that experienced by the Argentinians and they chose to make issuing paper money illegal - "No State shall ... make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts;...".
To make this work we need a cheap and portable machine than can assay a payment in coins in under a minute. Pocket MRI anyone?
1 - We're nowhere near desperate. We've been desperate-ish in the past... not lately.
2 - We have a high but predictable inflation... it's impossible to save in Pesos, so it stimulates spending and the economy survives.
3 - Purchase of dollars is restricted but there's a "healthy" black market that sells at a higher but well know rate (it's published in the newspapers and there are websites that inform the black market rate as well). The government counts on the existance of this black market to keep peace.
4 - Going cashless solves nothing..!!! Your cashless bank account still lists an amount of pesos and if you want to convert them to dollars the normal restrictions apply. People taking advantage of bitcoin and other schemes are simply operating in the black market... it could be bitcoin, it could be bonds or stock.
As a Slashdot discussion grows longer, the probability of an analogy involving cars approaches one.
So, nobody trusts you because you have shown that you will steal peoples money at the drop of the hat. Lets see what quotes would make people trust you even less...
We will monitor everything. Or as the author says...
"Going cashless will also help curb corruption, because electronic cash would make all transactions accountable. People will have to justify the origin of any form of cash to get it converted into digital wallets or bank accounts."
We will take whatever we can. Or as the author says...
"Since a small percentage of the total cash will not surface and therefore will become worthless, the government can electronically “mint” that money to pay off debt or help pay expenses."
We promise after we rake you over the coals a few more times we will stop. Or as the author says...
"Eventually, as the “electronic” peso regained stability, currency controls (the so called “cepo”) could be relaxed and finally lifted, giving the currency credibility again."
Argentina has other problems, currency is just an symptom.
1) There is no dollar outrun, there is a government that artificially keeps the dollar cheap for political / economic esoteric reasons. So it needs to prevent massive access to that cheap dollar market.
2) Most the population hardly reaches the end of month, so the "lack of dollars" issue directly affects less than 30% of it, because the rest don't even have pesos to exchange for dollars.
3) The real problem of the people is that we've no credit... No 20 years mortgages for buying a house, 6 years is the best you can get, and only in specially stable situations. So the little guy can't "invest" his little money in anything bigger than a car. That has the secondary effect that the little money you save, you need to spend it quick before the government eats it. That's good for the economy, good for the government, bad for the little guy.
All in all, this is a government that has "kept" unemployment rates low, sacrificing other economic variables. Yes, it's socialism, but that's better than what we had from previous governments. And yes, this is a corrupt government, but that doesn't really make our country a special enough to be news for nerds.
Any government that was willing to not abuse the currency could simply STOP ABUSING the currency. They would not need to go cashless.
Going cashless would at best be a meaningless symbol.
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
Argentina, like most Latin American countries, would do well to toss the Presidential system. The US, by and large, has lucked out, in no small part to what Bagehot referred to as Americans' "genius for politics". But in other societies, where the legislative and judicial branches have remained stunted as compared to the US Congress, SCOTUS and the Federal Courts, all the Presidential system does is deliver near-dictatorial powers into the hands of the President. The checks and balances may exist on paper in countries like Argentina, but the reality is that legislative assemblies and courts become little more than rubber stamps.
A parliamentary system like the Westminster system would, I think, work far better. The titular head of state of a parliamentary state does hold some potent reserve powers, but is restricted from using them in all but the most extreme circumstances. The "effective" government, that is the governing Executive, only survives so long as the legislative assembly retains confidence in it, and ministers are normally chosen from among members of the legislature, and thus, at least in a nominal way, remain equals to every other person sitting in the legislature. In a parliamentary system, the titular head of state represents a sort of negative power; in that he or she deprives the effective executive of absolute control of reserve powers and prerogatives.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
They could also look to local currencies schemes.
Local Currencies, or rather, minor currencies where people typically use a skill or service they have to do it for someone else, and they get paid in a virtual currency, which they can use to pay others for similar jobs.
This can help communities really grow, and has done many times over the years in communities hurt by recessions, general financial abuse and crises.
There are an ungodly number of local currencies around the world.
Most of them, ironically enough, exist in places where there isn't even really any financial crisis, or wasn't at least.
Many people use them quite literally as a favor-system, which is basically what it is anyway, a currency-backed favor system.
They can be used to complement legal currency systems, and yes, there are even many local exchanges for some of them to convert them to real money.
Some local currencies don't want that though, and some even have outright maximum "credits" that you can gain to stop hoarding and other such things.
In a sense, it would be sort of like what Bitcoin has become in recent years. But this wouldn't be as volatile as BTC.
If you are interested in reading more, just google up on it, there are quite a few wikis with loads of information on them, including.
If you do not trust your own country's currency that's your own problem. I do trust my Argentinian currency. What I don't trust is you and everyone else who are always trying to bring our economy down to a crisis, so you benefit with the foreign money you have been accumulating over the years. Just stop trying to convince the hole world that we all want what only you, and very few others want. I, as an Argentinian, am NOT desperate in the way you claim. I, as an Argentinian, do NOT agree with you. Please, Slashdot, if you are going to post things like this at least make a poll to every person in Argentina to know how everybody actually feels. And most of us voted for our actual president, consider that. This post is insulting.
Even my signature is on-topic!
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
1) Greedily take control of money markets, inflate currency and drain an economy. (ie. Create a problem).
2) When the problem, such as economic shortages really hits, even though it is because of your greed and manipulation of money markets, don't take the blame or responsibility.
3) Say, "Oh My! What a problem! There is only one solution and we must implement it via emergency measures. We need more control of money in the economy. Henceforth, all money shall be electronic."
4) Have all Major Media Outlets back your idea as the only viable solution
5) Implement your solution.
6) If anyone objects too much, you know what happens. Either they disappear or, "Oooops! So you are saying that all of the money in your bank account disappeared?! C'mon, you can't expect us to believe all that electronic money disappeared into thin air? Can you?
7) Total Control of money. Total Control of Country.
Using Bitcoin can "help curb black market exchanges, fight corruption and restore the country's image."
~Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit, but Wisdom is knowing not to put it in a fruit salad.
Hi from Buenos Aires.
No, the solution is not going cashless. We don't have a banking problem. We have a currency problem, because the government steals from us in the form of inflation. Going cashless is giving the government more power to screw us.
Also we know very well how to play this game. If you can save, you buy other currencies like dollars. Or houses, if you are rich.
If you need the money, you convert and spend as fast as possible. Inefficient and somewhat expensive, but possible.
Bitcoin is easier to transfer, but too volatile. You might as well save in pesos.
I have an issue with your item #2: inflation stimulates spending and that is how economy survives. This is a Keynesian theory, which, however, inaccurately switches cause and the outcome.
Lets assume, for the sake of the argument, that there is no inflation, there is a predictable interest rate and the people can save it.
If people can save it, there will be a market for deposits countered for the market to borrow the capital. People could expect predictable interest rate, and those who wanted to borrow could expect a place where to go and get a business loan.
Those who could get the business loan would actually have to spend it, using their best abilities, weighing all the risks, so that to minimize the risk of loss, maximize the net added value of the project and the benefit to the entrepreneur.
So here is the contrast:
- In an inflationary economy money is spent by the most inefficient player - government. Other than the government people would probably be less inclined to invest in long term projects.
- in a stable economy, with negligible (say zero) inflation rate, people actually save money (the capital). Only the best projects get investment and there is a low probability to mal-investment (such as bridge to nowhere in Alaska).
If someone will say that low inflation is not workable, I can say that prior to WW1 UK, Spain's, Russia's money were pegged to gold, and their economies were growing. 2% interest rate on deposits was considered a healthy return.
My wife is Argentinan, as well as all of her family, and a great deal of our friends. We live in Mexico, and travel to Argentina at least once a year.
The Argentinian exchange rate has dropped in the last year, although not as much as it happened 15 years ago — nor, by far, how it happened 30 years ago. And the local economy is far, far from hopeless— The standards of living in Argentina are quite high, most middle-class people travel outside the country regularly. As a Mexican travelling regularly to Argentina for the last five years, I have seen their life costs go from slightly cheaper to slightly more expensive — and today again slightly cheaper than ours.
My family has their savings partly in pesos, in local banks, and partly in US dollars, in the safe deposits in the bank — AFAICT, they don't have a dollarised bank account. And they have a very decent level of life. My in-laws, as an example, travelled last year one month in Europe, and came to visit for a month in Mexico, without compromising their finances.
This is the second post badmouthing Argentina in Slashdot in the past few weeks. I know I am answering with some (few) personal data points, but that's in the end how reality is: A huge collection of individual stories. And they are far from as dire as you portrait them.
No one's ever thought "hey maybe the government and bankers are using fiat currency system is screwing us all and we should go back to the monetary system that we've had for most of recorded history"?
A lot of people will point out the short comings of a precious metal money supply but it has one big advantage: You can't create gold through quantitative easing or other manipulative accounting tricks. You actually have to trade goods and services in order to accumulate it.
I beg to differ; it is news for nerds and Argentina is "special" (read: way more f**ked up than most countries, see link below) enough to be interesting...
Specifically, the government is so corrupt, it's insane.
You wouldn't be bitching if it was about some corrupt African country, right? Well, Argentina is more corrupt (again, see link).
Your typical Argentinian comment about your current gov't being better than the previous ones made me throw up in my mouth just a little.
If you want to compare it to anything, how about "Argentina's government isn't as good as what human beings in any country deserve to have", instead?
But you should look at it as an absolute value: Argentina's government as well as its economy SUCK, period.
Is to kick out that crazy government and put in one that is good at running the country.
At least it's backed by a wealthy, if corrupt, corporation.
They are allready resorting to the traditional solution for when their enconomoies in the shitter bang the war drum and invade the Falklands.
Yes, you have a point — And specially in point #3. I live in Mexico, where few people can afford to buy a house as well. And there's a big difference favoring Argentina: The rental contracts. Legal rental contracts are always for two years or more, and with prices fixed in pesos (this means, you know how much you will pay for your rental two years from now). Although this won't allow you to buy a house, it does allow you to mid-term plan your finances better than in most of our continent.
The moron that posted this article, has never been to Argentina.
It is not the currency that is the problem. It is the massive, systemic, multi-generational culture of theft of everyone, by everyone, in Argentina.
An Argentinian will look you in the eye, rip you off, and be so convincing when they do it, that even they believe they did nothing wrong.
so, digital anything, will just make the theft all the easier.
Seriously.
She honestly doesn't give a shit about her people.
She just wants her percentage of whatever can be bilked out of the populace and world in general.
And her solution to every problem is to ignore its very existence. Entirely.
Basically Argentina needs a bloody revolution and then a general election.
Likely that'll never happen though.
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
Remember, people shouldn't generalize from their privileged tech-centric lifestyles to the entire world! I can just see a small street-food vendor in BA trying to explain bitcoin to the kid trying to buy a snack.
They don't mean "barter", when they talk of "cashless society" — and it is the Statists' prescription for everyone , not just Argentina.
The electronic transactions will be subject to the same surveillance our phone-calls already are — who (other than the totalitarian Statists) would seriously consider it, is a mystery to me.
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
>But replacing pocket change and what's in wallets is the tiniest, tiniest fraction of the total global money. ...
>If you required a 1:1 gold backing
I'd say you're just returning back to sound money after the insane inflationary run-up
Or chart on here.
Yes, the amount of inflation is staggering, therefore the amount of pain to return back to sound levels will also be staggering.
Because the dang things get creases when I fold em up to put in my pocket.
If both are backed by the same entity, specifically the faith of government X, why the hell should their e-currency be any more valuable than their paper currency? If I was lying to you what difference would it make if I wrote it down on paper or sent it via text message?
As if it will be any better with digital currency.
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
Argentina isn't desperate and is actually holding on their own, their biggest issue is inflation which is about 25%. So i am surprised to see this story being about Argentina and not Venezuela
Now we venezuelans are indeed in much trouble. The inflation is so high the government doesn't publish it anymore, but is expected to be near 200% per year. Every item you can think of it's scarse since most of them are being imported and the government ran out of dollars since oil price has gone down (and corruption gets getting higher)
We get fingerprinted at supermarkets so we aren't able to buy twice the same item in a week, yet there are people that pay the government and get items and resell them on the black market. I am talking mostly about food, toiler paper and most supplies.
A car here costs more than an apartment, for another example.
Conversion rate is nearly 320 bolivares per USD, while 3 years ago it was about 20 bolivares per USD
Open Source Java Web Forum with LDAP authentication
They and Greece could convert to the Vietnamese Dong. The people are getting a whole lot of Dong anyway, so they may as well make it official!
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
This is the second "Argentina is desesperate" article in a few weeks. We (Argentinians) all know where this comes from (and no, I'm not that paranoid): Thomas Griesa and hedge funds, led by Paul Singer. This is just another paid article stating that the country is desesperate, while it's quite the opposite. We just live by with our local currency, there's no "desperation", public health works, public education works, national debt is being reduced, employment is up. Yeah, we have our whole deal of issues, that are *very* far from desperate. There will be presidential elections this year. I'm not very optimistic, the huge propaganda machine (which includes this article) seems to be working, 3 of 4 of the running candidates are known for favoring Griesa and Singer and putting the country back 30 years. The fourth one is the guy with less chances.
Just write your own.
Written like someone from Europe.
Have you ever been to Argentina?
They buy houses with CASH there. I'm serious.
After you get a loan for the place, you go to the bank, get CASH in a bag or two, hire a few security guards to walk with you to the street, then all 3 of you get into a cab for the drive to the closing.
Sometimes people are robbed just outside the bank after picking up their life savings. Clearly, someone tipped off the robbers.
Oh - and many people there don't use credit cards or anything except cash for all their needs outside BsAs. I'm not going to say that there are places where digital currency will work, but truck drivers and people working in small family-run businesses around the country will still need cash.
And how will they pay for the hookers that are part of society there? I take that back - they already accept credit cards, I hear.
Heck - in my travels around Argentina, getting drinking water from a tap was enough of a challenge. They did have internet everywhere I was, but I was only on well-travelled tourist places. Half a mile off that path - no electricity, no potable water, no internet.
The US, by and large, has lucked out, in no small part to what Bagehot referred to as Americans' "genius for politics". But in other societies, where the legislative and judicial branches have remained stunted as compared to the US Congress, SCOTUS and the Federal Courts, all the Presidential system does is deliver near-dictatorial powers into the hands of the President.
Based on the record power grabs by the executive branch in the past couple administrations the US luck is fast running out. We've worked our way from free country to police state light. Sadly I expect in my lifetime that will become a full police state or, as I like to say, a banana republic.
Five years ago, I lived in Argentina when it was 3.8 pesos/dollar and not one single person approached me about changing money. To see how far they gone down to the toilet bothers me for my friends still there.
Personally, I don't think they'll trust cashless. The day that they overnight, devalued the currency 3 to 1 is not forgotten. If you had dollar accounts, they devalued your dollars by taking them at the 1:1 ratio converting them into pesos, then devaluing it by 1/3rd. They also well remember "corralito" (little corral) when they wouldn't give you access to your money and limited how much you could take out. My friend had money saved but couldn't get at it and had to sell stuff and borrow to get by when he had a decent bank account.
They told me that when I come back to visit, bring dollars, they'll take care of me :-).
with far greater control might I add.
Technology is a great idea, but not using it to centralize currency manipulation by the government to seize and loot peoples assets is even better.
Yes, a cashless society would offer certain benefits, but it would prove to be far too tempting a target by governments and criminals.
Centralization of power is always a bad idea. Decentralized everything, from countries, to militaries to commerce.
The name of the game is to minimize risk, from psychopaths who are invariably attracted to power in government jobs.
With decentralization, no way could they organize stuff like the looting they did in 2007 by the banks of some 17 trillion dollars of American tax payer money to gve to all of their banker buddies/friends.
Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
Buy Euros! (seriously its been = to the dollar for the first time in a long while, house in France for 40k, totally doable atm. )
This hysterical proposal is ludicrous, completely out of touch with Argentina's economic realities. First, for all her faults, and not withstanding the debt vultures' incredible legal chicanery, the fact is that Kirchner's gov has achieved a remarkable reduction in the country's net foreign public debt since 2004, to the point where its market value, net of reserves, is well under 50% of GDP -- the lowest level since the military junta seized power in 1976. Second, the fact is Argentina's own elite not only owns most of the remaining "foreign" debt itself, but also owns more than $400 billion of offshore flight wealth. None of this wealth is accounted for in Argentina's national economic statistics, and very little of it pays any taxes -- despite the fact that Argentina has a world wide income tax, like the U.S. So Argentina's economic problem is not now one of an unstable currency, but of its inability to tax its wealthy elites on all this offshore loot -- or to provide incentives for it to come home. Third, Argentina happens to be sitting on shale oil reserves that may well be larger than those of the U.S. All things considered, relative to its current population, it is one of the richest, most NEGATIVELY indebted countries in the world. Its currency is if anything undervalued, as are its gov bonds -- and as soon as the silly debt vulture problem is solved, and a new government is elected, the conditions may well exist for a sharp rise in inward investment. That, in turn, may require Argentina's central bank to move deftly to sterilize the inflows so that the peso doesn't appreciate too quickly. But overall, there's no reason for Argentina to repeat any of the weird experiments with monetary policy that the disastrous military gov of the 1976-83 and the mad cavallo gov of 1992-2001 ran -- policies that left the country heavily indebted, and hostage to NY judges.
Go cashless... "...to store their savings away from government control." Ha ha ha ha haaaaa HAHAHA!
Argentina insists on trying to use convenient financial media like Cheerios and M & Ms as currencies. These are fun to use, but have historically lent themselves to inflation, Argentina's picturesque national sport. It should try this monetary base instead: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R...
Two immediate advantages: it's more difficult for bureaucrats to add zeroes to them, and they can't be pickpocketed.
The US, by and large, has lucked out, in no small part to what Bagehot referred to as Americans' "genius for politics". But in other societies, where the legislative and judicial branches have remained stunted as compared to the US Congress, SCOTUS and the Federal Courts, all the Presidential system does is deliver near-dictatorial powers into the hands of the President.
Based on the record power grabs by the executive branch in the past couple administrations the US luck is fast running out. We've worked our way from free country to police state light. Sadly I expect in my lifetime that will become a full police state or, as I like to say, a banana republic.
Dude, this is all designed into the system. Checks and Balances are meaningless if the a) the Executive never does anything worthy of being checked, and b) everyone is not constantly bitching/arguing about which things should have been checked.
Here's what's not designed into the system: a lawyer makes a Youtube video alleging he's going to be assassinated by the President's thugs, then he pays someone to shoot him, and shuts down the country for six months until the cops figure it out. Or the time the President ordered the Army to administer a referendum allowing him to run for a third term, and the Constitutional Court and Senate decided this was impeachable, and ordered the army to exile him. There's still some debate over whether that counts as a coup d'tat. On the one hand, the Army stormed the Presidential Palace, on the other the Supreme Court said it was ok.
In the US we avoid these things largely because we've got a religious/./slavish devotion to the Constitution, and the guy trying to get around it by framing Obama for murder or arranging a secret impeachment trial would be fucked politically. And it seems to be working pretty well in some of the bigger countries of the world (ie: Indonesia, Brazil). But in quite a few Latin American the intricate levers of power, the numerous opportunities for stupid BS fights, etc. just seem to overwhelm the political system and you get a level of bullshit unimaginable for an American.
If you had a nice, boring Westminster system you'd have less personality cult (because the dude in power would technically be subordinate to a powerless President), less bullshitty (a PM is a creature of the Legislature, so if the Senate gets pissed at the PM of Honduras it just fires him and doesn't give a shit about either the Constitutional Court or the Army), elections matter less (Obama is Presient until 2016 come hell or high water, if David Cameron or Steven Harper fuck up enough they could be fired tomorrow), much simpler lines of responsibility (there's no ability for the Executive to claim the Legislative screwed up, and if they'd only supported that bill he'd wanted [Bad Thing] would have been avoided if the Legislative and Executive are the same guy), etc.
I love the way these failure-of-socialism articles cause the average slashdotter to cognitive dissonance.
Just read the same 'suggestion' to go cashless by 'an expert' about Germany and Switzerland. Concerted effort here??
Doesn't anybody in Argentina buy gold? Gold tends to hold purchasing power in ways that fiat currencies do not.
Let's get this straight. Argentina's money is so worthless that people no longer want to use it and use foreign currencies instead. So now the Argentine government wants to force everybody into using a digital form of worthless currency so they can force people to use it rather than another currency actually worth something. Only in a mind bending socialist world does that make sense.
I don't come to /. for the stories - I come for the comments. I don't think this story was any good, but I was educated a lot by the input from the Argentinians - not a voice I hear elsewhere in my online life.
Thank you Argentinian contributors - your insights are very welcome.
As it happens, I'm posting from Wales, and this year it's the 150th anniversary of the Welsh settlement in Patagonia, the 'Gwladfa' - there are still many hundreds of Welsh speakers in Patagonia, and many thousands of people of Welsh descent.
See http://www.glaniad.com/ & if any Argentinians are in the UK soon, the National Library of Wales are opening a major exhibition in Aberystwyth about the Welsh colony in Patagonia on the 23rd of May.
Imagine if the US went to that system. Imagine a Republican controlled Congress choosing a PM.
I wonder if a tribunal system would work, where the executive would be three people. Perhaps one chosen by the People, on by the Legislature, and the other, not sure.
In the USA, and for almost ten years already in Mexico as well, retirement plans are personal: You save the money for your retirement, usually through a banking branch devoted to long-term finances. And hope for the best.
The scheme we had in Mexico until 2007, and that Argentina enjoys, is largely different: It's solidary retirement. You pay your retirement basically as a tax, it happens automatically before your paycheck arrives to your hands. What retired people receive comes from the active workers' dues.
How much do you receive for retirement? A large percentage (IIRC ~80%) of the salary you got during your last three years of employment, multiplied by the accumulated inflation/devaluation.
FWIW, Argentina moved to individual retirement schemes in the 1990s, when they followed rigidly neoliberal schemes. Retirement funds plummeted at the 2002 crisis, and –to avoid all retired people from losing everything, plus working people's money to disappear as well– they went back to the solidary retirement scheme.