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Falling Dollar and Relative value

 
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JonnyBravo



Joined: 30 Oct 2006
Posts: 80
Location: Bogota, Colombia

PostPosted: Tue Feb 19, 2008 4:11 pm    Post subject: Falling Dollar and Relative value Reply with quote

Does the declining dollar make Ecuador the cheapest country in South America? If it makes exchanging the dollar in other countries more expensive, than does Ecuador win by default?

I saw this list this morning, not sure how true it is:

http://budgetmonkeytravel.com/budget-travel/latin-america-travel-cheap/



Thoughts?
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nineisone



Joined: 23 Jun 2006
Posts: 187

PostPosted: Tue Feb 19, 2008 7:52 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Interesting chart. Not sure if I understand it correctly, but I would be skeptical about the listing of Venezuela. Even with the bloated exchange rate and the thirst for dollars there, I would still rate a daily budget in Caracas as being on the high end of the scale.

Surprised also to see Honduras way up the chart, which outside of the bay islands, has always been one of the cheapest destinations in L.A. in which to live. If this chart is done by a travel agency, the bay islands might have been the only area taken into consideration.

In regards to Ecuador, posts in the past indicated that dollarization would make Ecuador a more expensive country in which to live. A lot of that talk was before the dollar really started to swoon, so I don't know. Perhaps Justin can comment.

I'm assuming your concerns might be over "start up" cash you would be bringing to a particular country in usd, and maximizing your buying power with it. A realistic concern.
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JonnyBravo



Joined: 30 Oct 2006
Posts: 80
Location: Bogota, Colombia

PostPosted: Tue Feb 19, 2008 9:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Sorry to be so Americentric in my first post. I should have said the US dollar.

From the link:
Quote:
The figures are meant mainly as a comparison between countries and as a very rough lowball estimate. See below.


Fair enough. It's still food for thought.

Quote:
Baseline travel cost is per person, assumes you are sharing a double room with a travel buddy, and covers two no-frills restaurant meals a day. So the figure is an absolute minimum � it does not include transport costs, entrance fees, alcohol, or that luxurious third restaurant meal. The prices are based on the average low-end accommodations and meal prices available on the Lonely Planet website.


What the author didn't include can't account for major disparities unless his data is totally bunk, coastal/big city to small interior town comparisons aside. However, I've read many threads from the last year claiming Ecuador is one of the most expensive countries in Latin America. Is there a great disparity between living expensives for long-term stays and travel expenses? Is there a reason this disparity would be greater than in other countries to make it legitimately one of the most expensive countries?

Quote:
It should also be mentioned that costs vary wildly within each country as well. Big cities tend to be more expensive than rural areas, and top travel destinations are always pricier too. For example, the Galapagos Islands (which belong to Equador) are going to be much more expensive than some random town in the Equadorian mainland.


Takes me back to my Ecuador question. Is Quito significantly more expensive compared to the rest of Ecuador compared to large/capital cities in other countries?

As a person very interested in going to Ecuador for a long stay, I'm just trying to get as much information as I can. I've read other threads about country to country cost comparisons, but this data doesn't seem to reflect general consensus, so I want to know why.
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Justin Trullinger



Joined: 28 Jan 2005
Posts: 3110
Location: Seoul, South Korea and Myanmar for a bit

PostPosted: Wed Feb 20, 2008 10:51 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quito is definitely more expensive than rural areas- but the most touristy areas are catching up well enough that I doubt that it's any more disparate than other latin american countries.

Of all the countries listed, I know only Ecuador well, so can't really comment on the veracity of the data overall. BUt $8.50 strikes me as not merely "lowball," but honestly irresponsible to publish.

Though there are hostels in the zone of 12 to 15 dollars for a double room, you would be hard pushed to find a room for less than that. So maybe 6, maybe more of your $8 go on the room, then it's $1.25 "almuerzos." Again, they do exist, but at that end of the scale, no frills seems to consider hygiene a frill.

The numbers seem way suspect to me.


Best,

Justin
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ajarnlilly



Joined: 28 Dec 2006
Posts: 35
Location: Managua Nicaragua

PostPosted: Thu Feb 21, 2008 10:40 pm    Post subject: Ecuador compared Reply with quote

"The prices are based on the average low-end accommodations and meal prices available on the Lonely Planet website." (no date of publication mentioned)

This is what is said for clarification on the above mentioned website. It's clear that these numbers are for comparison between countries and not as travel budgeting info. Several caveats are included on that subject.

I think we all know that big cities and tourist destinations are going to be more expensive than smaller towns off the tourist-beaten-track.

Jonny, I don't know where you got the word that Ecuador is one of the most expensive countries. My research has found just the opposite, especially if you're not a tourist. Since most tourists want to visit the Galapagos, and that IS very expensive, that may have jacked up the overall price of visiting Ecuador.

In searching hostels online, I found that a private single w/bath could be had for $8/day in Otavalo, for instance, and that IS a tourist destination. Dorm rooms started at $4.50. Of course, long term stays will cost much less than that.

Since no one in Ecuador seems to want to hire me over the internet (too old at 60, apparently, and scant recent teaching experience) I have been looking into teaching through a volunteer program, at least until I can look for a job on the ground. One states that a volunteer can "homestay" for $8/day. Another asks $300/month board and room. Another, in Quito, states that they pay their Ecuadorian staff $140/mo and they have an average life style. What they ask in return is a half day of teaching - English or some other subject, including sport, math, computer, art, crafts, etc.

So it seems to me that, depending on how "local" you want to go and how expensive your lifestyle, you can count on somewhere between $140 and $300/mo as a bare minimum. In living in other countries I have found that once you make local (native) friends and connect with expats, you can find much better deals than any found in a backpacker's travel guide.

Feeding yourself is just one example. Wherever I have lived or travelled, including the US, I have made it a habit to eat one meal a day of finger foods purchased at a grocery store or market. You don't always have to go to a sit-down restaurant to eat. Sandwiches, salads, fruits and nuts, etc can keep you satisfied and healthy.

This is what Gary at www.pro-ecuador.com has to say about it:
"We have lived in Cotacachi, about 2 hours north of Quito for more than a year. Nice unfurnished apartments here rent for $150-200. The problem is that it is quite expensive to buy furniture and there is no used furniture market. Once that hurdle is passed, however, things are very cheap.
Our utilities run about $25 per month, with another $60 per month for DSL internet and telephone. Long distance in country telephone calls are very inexpensive. We have a VOIP account for calls to the US and Canada.

The two of us spend about $150 per month on food, which includes all of the fresh fruit and veggies we can eat at about $12 per week.

Medical and dental costs are low. Teeth cleanings are $15, laser fillings around $20 and root canals and crowns at $120. I fell off my bike and had emergency room treatment, two x-rays, and a follow up visit all for $90. Excellent rehabilitation treatments with a variety of modern machines cost $2 per treatment.

Taxi's are $1, buses about $1 per hour. Clothing is generally somewhat higher than in the states.

Restaurants typically are $1.50 to $6 here, for very excellent meals.

We have lots of this type of info on our website, www.pro-ecuador.com

We are happy to answer questions."

Sorry, I don't have similar info for other countries. I am only interested in Ecuador. Happy hunting! - Lilly
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kingkristopher



Joined: 11 Feb 2006
Posts: 62

PostPosted: Thu Apr 10, 2008 2:30 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

That info seems VERY suspect to me, but then I'm not sure if I'm reading it right. I've lived in four Latin American countries. Venezuela ( Caracas-2 years), Ecuador (Quito-1 year), Colombia (Bogota-2 months) and Panama (Panama City-4 years). Believe it or not of those four, Caracas was the cheapest. Of course, that was five years ago before most of the civil, political and economic unrest that has plagued the country recently.

For what it's worth, my lowest overall salary was in Ecuador (750 USD/month) and I was able to maintain the same lifestyle as everywhere else, so I'd probably say that Ecuador is on the low end. Bu 8.50 per day, that's nonsense...
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naturegirl321



Joined: 04 May 2003
Posts: 9041
Location: home sweet home

PostPosted: Thu Apr 10, 2008 3:07 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

It must have bee before the drop the dollar. right now compared to a month ago the dollar is only worth 90 percent of what it was before and it's dropping every day.
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Justin Trullinger



Joined: 28 Jan 2005
Posts: 3110
Location: Seoul, South Korea and Myanmar for a bit

PostPosted: Fri Apr 11, 2008 3:08 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

You have to stay up to date on these things, as they change rapidly.

Anyone in Quito who's earning $140 a month is NOT living an "average" lifestyle. In the last five years, anyone paying a full time staff person $140 per month is in violation of the law. It's that simple. (this is not so say that those jobs don't exist, but it's nothing to be proud of. There is no way anyone is living anything resembling an acceptable lifestyle on $140 a month.)

Another factor may be the lack on internet saviness of a lot of businesspeople round here- I've frequently seen prices years out of date on websites. I'm in Otovalo with some regularity, and if there's a single with bath in the town for $8, I'd like to know about it. The place I stay is $12 to $14 single, around $20 if my girlfriend is with me.

I can't find one right now, but have seen a few studies that indicate that Ecuador, since dolarizaci�n, is on of Latin America's most expensive countries. THat seems about right to me- certainly quite a bit more expensive than Colombia or Peru, for sure.

When were you in Quito, KingKris?

Best,

Justin
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kingkristopher



Joined: 11 Feb 2006
Posts: 62

PostPosted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 1:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

When I lived in Quito I worked for a company called inlingua. Not the best company but one perk was that my rent was only $50/month in a house they owned (in El Batan across from Estadio Atahualpa). As I said, I made upwards of $750/month so that gave me enough room to manouevre when it came to discretionary spending. I got to travel quite frequently and never found myself too short of money.

I'm sure that the situation has changed plenty. It's changing rapidly here in Panama, too. Prices are getting out of control. I'm paying $225/month for a small one bedroom, but only because I locked in a two-year lease. My neighbours who just moved in are paying $350 for the same apartment. It only figures to get worse. Food, gasoline everything is rising a lot faster than wages can compensate for.
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