martes, 23 de abril de 2013

Duro año para los países desarrollados

Poor little rich countries


The wealthy economies are in for a tough year
THE outlook for economic growth in the West is bleak, according to the IMF’s latest World Economic Outlook, released on April 16th. Worldwide output is expected to grow at just over 3% in 2013, but rich countries will lag behind, expanding at 1.2%. Growth in emerging markets, by contrast, will exceed 5%, with Asia and sub-Saharan Africa motoring along at 7% and 5.6% respectively. The IMF's report praises euro-area policymakers for avoiding a break-up, but notes that parts of the currency union are still uncompetitive and constrained by austerity. The failure of cash injections to trickle down to households and businesses is dampening prospects, too. The American economy, though buoyed by recovering housing and credit markets, must endure the effects of the budget sequester. 



lunes, 22 de abril de 2013

Procesando enorme cantidad de datos para contratar mejores empleados

Big Data, Trying to Build Better Workers


John-Patrick Thomas



BOSSES, as it turns out, really do matter — perhaps far more than even they realize.


In telephone call centers, for example, where hourly workers handle a steady stream of calls under demanding conditions, the communication skills and personal warmth of an employee’s supervisor are often crucial in determining the employee’s tenure and performance. In fact, recent research shows that the quality of the supervisor may be more important than the experience and individual attributes of the workers themselves.
New research calls into question other beliefs. Employers often avoid hiring candidates with a history of job-hopping or those who have been unemployed for a while. The past is prologue, companies assume. There’s one problem, though: the data show that it isn’t so. An applicant’s work history is not a good predictor of future results.
These are some of the startling findings of an emerging field called work-force science. It adds a large dose of data analysis, a k a Big Data, to the field of human resource management, which has traditionally relied heavily on gut feel and established practice to guide hiring, promotion and career planning.
Work-force science, in short, is what happens when Big Data meets H.R.
The new discipline has its champions. “This is absolutely the way forward,” says Peter Cappelli, director of the Center for Human Resources at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. “Most companies have been flying completely blind.”
Today, every e-mail, instant message, phone call, line of written code and mouse-click leaves a digital signal. These patterns can now be inexpensively collected and mined for insights into how people work and communicate, potentially opening doors to more efficiency and innovation within companies.
Digital technology also makes it possible to conduct and aggregate personality-based assessments, often using online quizzes or games, in far greater detail and numbers than ever before.
In the past, studies of worker behavior were typically based on observing a few hundred people at most. Today, studies can include thousands or hundreds of thousands of workers, an exponential leap ahead.
“The heart of science is measurement,” says Erik Brynjolfsson, director of the Center for Digital Business at the Sloan School of Management at M.I.T. “We’re seeing a revolution in measurement, and it will revolutionize organizational economics and personnel economics.”
The data-gathering technology, to be sure, raises questions about the limits of worker surveillance. “The larger problem here is that all these workplace metrics are being collected when you as a worker are essentially behind a one-way mirror,” says Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, an advocacy group. “You don’t know what data is being collected and how it is used.”
Companies view work-force data mainly as a valuable asset. Last December, for example, I.B.M. completed its $1.3 billion acquisition of Kenexa, a recruiting, hiring and training company. Kenexa’s corps of more than 100 industrial organizational psychologists and researchers was one attraction, but so was its data: Kenexa surveys and assesses 40 million job applicants, workers and managers a year.
Big companies like I.B.M., Oracle and SAP are pursuing the business opportunity. So is eHarmony, the online matchmaking service. It announced in January that it would retool its algorithm for romance so it could examine employee-employer relationships, and enter the talent search business later this year.
THE penchant for digital measurement and monitoring seems most suited to hourly employment, where jobs often involve routine tasks. But will this technology also be useful in identifying and nurturing successful workers in less-regimented jobs? Many companies think so, and can point to some encouraging evidence.
Tim Geisert, chief marketing officer for I.B.M.’s Kenexa unit, observed that an outgoing personality has traditionally been assumed to be the defining trait of successful sales people. But its research, based on millions of worker surveys and tests, as well as manager assessments, has found that the most important characteristic for sales success is a kind of emotional courage, a persistence to keep going even after initially being told no.
The team of behavioral and data scientists at Knack, a Silicon Valley start-up firm, uses computer games and constant measurement to test emotional intelligence, cognitive skills, working memory and propensity for risk-taking. Early pilot testers include the NYU Langone Medical Center, Bain & Company and a unit of Shell, says Guy Halfteck, Knack’s C.E.O. Google, not surprisingly, is committed to applying data-driven decision-making to human resource management. For years, candidates were screened according to SAT scores and college grade-point averages, metrics favored by its founders. But numbers and grades alone did not prove to spell success at Google and are no longer used as important hiring criteria, says Prasad Setty, vice president for people analytics.

Since 2007, the company has conducted extensive surveys of its work force. Google has found that the most innovative workers — also the “happiest,” by its definition — are those who have a strong sense of mission about their work and who also feel that they have much personal autonomy. “Our people decisions are no less important than our product decisions,” Mr. Setty says. “And we’re trying to apply the same rigor to the people side as to the engineering side.”

Evolv, a San Francisco start-up, uses data science to advise companies on hiring and managing hourly workers. Evolv is sharing its data from clients — data that are stripped of personally identifying information and demographics like race and sex — with researchers at Wharton, Yale and Stanford. (This column’s first two examples came from Evolv’s data and analysis.)
Michael Housman, an economist and managing director of analytics at Evolv, says he thinks work-force science will increasingly be applied across the spectrum of jobs and professions, building profits, productivity, innovation and worker satisfaction.
Evolv, he says, has focused initially on hourly workers and call centers, which capture masses of data on every call and online exchange. Jobs at these centers are often difficult and have very high rates of attrition, routinely as high as 100 percent a year. “We wanted to start where there was a huge opportunity” to make improvements, he says.
Transcom, a global operator of customer-service call centers, conducted a pilot project in the second half of 2012, using Evolv’s data analysis technology. To look for a trait like honesty, candidates might be asked how comfortable they are working on a personal computer and whether they know simple keyboard shortcuts for a cut-and-paste task. If they answer yes, the applicants will later be asked to perform that task.
Those who score high on honesty typically stay in their jobs 20 to 30 percent longer than those who don’t, Evolv says.
Neil Rae, an executive vice president of Transcom, was impressed with the project’s results and plans to use Evolv in the call centers he runs, which employ 12,500 workers.
In the call-center world, Mr. Rae says, 5 percent attrition a month — 60 percent a year — is stellar performance. Dropout rates are calculated at 30-day intervals, and it takes four to six weeks to train a worker. The cost of attrition — for hiring and training a replacement — is about $1,500 a worker, he says.
In the project with Evolv, Mr. Rae says, Transcom was able to hire fewer people — about 800 instead of a more typical 1,000 hires — to get 500 workers who were still on the job at least three months later. The big payoff, he says, should come in cost savings and better customer service with less worker churn in call centers.
“This makes hiring more a science and less subjective,” Mr. Rae says.

New York Times

Guía rápida del impuesto a Bienes Personales en Argentina

domingo, 21 de abril de 2013

Segmentar y explotar el mercado inmobiliario


Explotar un nicho definido del mercado

19/04/2013
POR VICTORIA ARANDA - ESPECIAL PARA ARQ
Lejos de la tendencia generalizada de desarrollar departamentos dos ambientes, en el estudio ATV apuntan a un sector específico: el de los que buscan viviendas amplias.

VIVIENDAS AMPLIAS. El estudio ATV apunta a este nicho particular del mercado.
VIVIENDAS AMPLIAS. El estudio ATV apunta a este nicho particular del mercado.
Plantarse frente a la tiranía del mercado, desobedecerla y apostar a diferenciarse a la hora de producir puede ser toda una estrategia cuando impera la uniformidad. Así, cuando en el sector inmobiliario los analistas estudian las tendencias y desmenuzan la demanda para después recomendar el desarrollo de departamentos de dos ambientes, de 50 metros cuadrados, quienes hacen otra cosa, necesariamente se destacan del resto.

ATV es un estudio de arquitectura dedicado a la realización de proyectos y construcción en el barrio de Palermo, que de un tiempo a esta parte se ha enfocado en desarrollar edificios de departamentos grandes, de tres o cuatro ambientes, o tal vez más. Federico Azubel, uno de los socios fundadores junto con Ignacio Trabucchi y Walter Viggiano, sostiene que en la actualidad y en Buenos Aires hay un cliente puntual para este tipo de producto. Y lo describe: “Aquel que compra hoy departamentos no es únicamente el inversor que necesita canalizar sus pesos y lo destina a un dos ambientes. Claramente, esos inversores están, pero también están los que deciden invertir esos pesos en vivir mejor, los que quieren que sus ahorros vayan a parar a su propia vivienda. Esos son los clientes para los que trabajamos”.

–¿Cuál es el tipo de producto que convoca hoy a ese comprador preciso que adquiere su departamento para irse a vivir?

–Hablamos de departamentos de tres ambientes con dependencias; de cuatro ambientes y de cuatro con dependencias y terraza. En relación al edificio, generalmente se trata de edificios doble frente, con pileta.

–¿En qué consiste la experiencia de trabajar “a medida”? ¿Por qué optaron por esa modalidad?

–Básicamente, consiste en trabajar con un proyecto base y después cada departamento se hace y se modifica con cada cliente; por ejemplo, con los materiales que él elige. ¿Por qué lo hacemos? Porque creemos en un servicio dinámico y customizado.

–Han centralizado su actividad en el área de Palermo. ¿Cómo se consigue tierra, hoy, en Palermo Hollywood, Soho o alguna de sus otras latitudes?

–La verdad es que la tierra es un bien absolutamente preciado; sobre todo, aquellos terrenos con más de 8,66 metros de frente. En esos casos, el valor de la tierra en la formación del precio de la unidad tiene una incidencia importante. Pero lo cierto es que todavía hay tierra en Palermo. De hecho, no nos hemos visto en la necesidad de salir a tocar el timbre casa por casa; a nosotros se nos acercan brokers e inmobiliarias afines con propuestas.

–¿Cómo los afectó la pesificación?

–Antes hablé de dinamismo y, por cierto, también demostramos ser dinámicos adecuándonos al negocio pesificado. Nosotros comercializamos todo en pesos, incluso la tierra. En algunos casos, compramos los terrenos a través de una modalidad, digamos, mixta. Por ejemplo, una parte de la operación se concreta por canje de metros de obras terminadas, ya sea del edificio que se erigirá en la tierra en cuestión, o bien en otros ya realizado. En esencia, estudiamos las opciones para hacer posible el negocio.

–¿Modificó la pesificación el valor de la tierra?

–No, en absoluto, por lo menos en Palermo. Los canjes se realizan a valores de mercado y el valor del metro cuadrado se mantuvo en este barrio. Lo que sí cambió fue la forma de pago.

–¿Cómo está el negocio de las oficinas en Palermo?

–Nuestro proyecto de oficinas en la calle Gorriti está completamente vendido –desde oficinas pequeñas hasta pisos de 140 m2 y un local– y se explica porque hay una zona muy concentrada por el polo audiovisual. Pero, así y todo, en este momento registramos una mayor demanda de viviendas.

Cerca de cumplir su primera década en el mercado, el próximo desafío que el estudio está a punto de alcanzar es certificar calidad de procesos a través de las normas ISO. “Apostamos a la mejora continua”, asegura Azubel.

sábado, 20 de abril de 2013

Un estudiante encuentra el error en la depresión del Excel

How a student took on eminent economists on debt issue - and won
Reuters

Harvard Professor and Economist Kenneth Rogoff speaks during the Sohn Investment Conference in New York, May 16, 2012. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

NEW YORK | Thu Apr 18, 2013 1:54pm EDT
(Reuters) - When Thomas Herndon, a student at the University of Massachusetts Amherst's doctoral program in economics, spotted possible errors made by two eminent Harvard economists in an influential research paper, he called his girlfriend over for a second look.
As they pored over the spreadsheets Herndon had requested from Harvard's Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, which formed the basis for a widely quoted 2010 study, they spotted what they believed were glaring errors.
"I almost didn't believe my eyes when I saw just the basic spreadsheet error," said Herndon, 28. "I was like, am I just looking at this wrong? There has to be some other explanation. So I asked my girlfriend, 'Am I seeing this wrong?'"
His girlfriend, Kyla Walters, replied: "I don't think so, Thomas."
In the world of economic luminaries, it doesn't get much bigger than Reinhart and Rogoff, whose work has had enormous influence in one of the biggest economic policy debates of the age.
Both have served at the International Monetary Fund. Reinhart was a chief economist at investment bank Bear Stearns in the 1980s, while Rogoff worked at the Federal Reserve, passing through Yale and MIT before landing at Harvard.
Their study, which found economic growth slows dramatically when a government's debt exceeds 90 percent of a country's annual economic output, has been cited by policymakers around the world as justification for slashing spending.
Former U.S. vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan, a Republican congressman from Wisconsin, is one influential politician who has cited the report to justify a budget slashing agenda.
Using the two professors' data, Herndon found that instead of a dramatic fall in growth, the decline was much milder, slowing to about 2.2 percent, instead of the slump to minus 0.1 percent that Reinhart and Rogoff predicted.
Things tend to move at a glacial pace in the world of academic research papers, but within 24 hours Herndon and his two teachers, who co-authored the report, Michael Ash and Robert Pollin, found themselves swept up in a global debate.
Herndon's paper began life as a replication exercise for a term paper in a graduate econometrics class. He expected to replicate Reinhart and Rogoff's results, then challenge the idea that high public debt caused growth to slow.
But he never got that far. Repeated failures to replicate the results roused his interest. Pollin and Ash encouraged him to pursue it after he convinced them he was onto something.
"At first, I didn't believe him. I thought, 'OK he's a student, he's got to be wrong. These are eminent economists and he's a graduate student,'" Pollin said. "So we pushed him and pushed him and pushed him, and after about a month of pushing him I said, 'Goddamn it, he's right.'"
Herndon approached Reinhart and Rogoff earlier this year for the spreadsheets they used in their paper. The two professors provided them at the start of April, unlocking the mysteries of the data that had stumped Herndon.
Herndon said only 15 of the 20 countries in the report had been used in the average. He also said Reinhart and Rogoff used only one year of data for New Zealand, 1951, when growth was minus 7.6 percent, significantly skewing the results.
Reinhart and Rogoff have admitted to a "coding error" in the spreadsheet that meant some countries were omitted from their calculations. But the economists denied they selectively omitted data or that they used a questionable methodology.
For Ash, the findings mean the claim that high public debt causes growth to stall no longer holds water.
"Their central thesis has been substantially weakened," he said.
Reinhart and Rogoff, however, say their conclusion that there is a correlation between high debt and slow growth still holds.
"It is sobering that such an error slipped into one of our papers despite our best efforts to be consistently careful," they said in a joint statement. "We do not, however, believe this regrettable slip affects in any significant way the central message of the paper or that in our subsequent work."
Now that Herndon has ably crossed swords with some of the most eminent figures in his field, he is thinking about expanding his work into a Ph.D. thesis.
(Reporting By Edward Krudy; Editing by Stacey Joyce)


Costos: ¿Cuánto cuesta mantener un auto en Buenos Aires?

viernes, 19 de abril de 2013

Krugman: La depresión del Excel


The Excel Depression



In this age of information, math errors can lead to disaster. NASA’sMars Orbiter crashed because engineers forgot to convert to metric measurements; JPMorgan Chase’s “London Whale” venture went bad in part because modelers divided by a sum instead of an average. So, did an Excel coding error destroy the economies of the Western world?. New York Times



The story so far: At the beginning of 2010, two Harvard economists, Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, circulated a paper, “Growth in a Time of Debt,” that purported to identify a critical “threshold,” a tipping point, for government indebtedness. Once debt exceeds 90 percent of gross domestic product, they claimed, economic growth drops off sharply.
Ms. Reinhart and Mr. Rogoff had credibility thanks to a widely admired earlier book on the history of financial crises, and their timing was impeccable. The paper came out just after Greece went into crisis and played right into the desire of many officials to “pivot” from stimulus to austerity. As a result, the paper instantly became famous; it was, and is, surely the most influential economic analysis of recent years.
In fact, Reinhart-Rogoff quickly achieved almost sacred status among self-proclaimed guardians of fiscal responsibility; their tipping-point claim was treated not as a disputed hypothesis but as unquestioned fact. For example, a Washington Post editorial earlier this yearwarned against any relaxation on the deficit front, because we are “dangerously near the 90 percent mark that economists regard as a threat to sustainable economic growth.” Notice the phrasing: “economists,” not “some economists,” let alone “some economists, vigorously disputed by other economists with equally good credentials,” which was the reality.
For the truth is that Reinhart-Rogoff faced substantial criticism from the start, and the controversy grew over time. As soon as the paper was released, many economists pointed out that a negative correlation between debt and economic performance need not mean that high debt causes low growth. It could just as easily be the other way around, with poor economic performance leading to high debt. Indeed, that’s obviously the case for Japan, which went deep into debt only after its growth collapsed in the early 1990s.
Over time, another problem emerged: Other researchers, using seemingly comparable data on debt and growth, couldn’t replicate the Reinhart-Rogoff results. They typically found some correlation between high debt and slow growth — but nothing that looked like a tipping point at 90 percent or, indeed, any particular level of debt.
Finally, Ms. Reinhart and Mr. Rogoff allowed researchers at the University of Massachusetts to look at their original spreadsheet — and the mystery of the irreproducible results was solved. First, they omitted some data; second, they used unusual and highly questionable statistical procedures; and finally, yes, they made an Excel coding error. Correct these oddities and errors, and you get what other researchers have found: some correlation between high debt and slow growth, with no indication of which is causing which, but no sign at all of that 90 percent “threshold.”
In response, Ms. Reinhart and Mr. Rogoff have acknowledged the coding error, defended their other decisions and claimed that they never asserted that debt necessarily causes slow growth. That’s a bit disingenuous because they repeatedly insinuated that proposition even if they avoided saying it outright. But, in any case, what really matters isn’t what they meant to say, it’s how their work was read: Austerity enthusiasts trumpeted that supposed 90 percent tipping point as a proven fact and a reason to slash government spending even in the face of mass unemployment.
So the Reinhart-Rogoff fiasco needs to be seen in the broader context of austerity mania: the obviously intense desire of policy makers, politicians and pundits across the Western world to turn their backs on the unemployed and instead use the economic crisis as an excuse to slash social programs.
What the Reinhart-Rogoff affair shows is the extent to which austerity has been sold on false pretenses. For three years, the turn to austerity has been presented not as a choice but as a necessity. Economic research, austerity advocates insisted, showed that terrible things happen once debt exceeds 90 percent of G.D.P. But “economic research” showed no such thing; a couple of economists made that assertion, while many others disagreed. Policy makers abandoned the unemployed and turned to austerity because they wanted to, not because they had to.
So will toppling Reinhart-Rogoff from its pedestal change anything? I’d like to think so. But I predict that the usual suspects will just find another dubious piece of economic analysis to canonize, and the depression will go on and on.



jueves, 18 de abril de 2013

Consumo de carne con leve suba


El consumo de carne creció 7% en el primer trimestre del año

Cada argentino come 59,7 kilos de carne por año. En baja desde 2010, el consumo se recupera por el aumento en la oferta y los desincentivos a la exportación. Clarín




Creció el consumo de carne en la Argentina. Según el último informe de Ciccra, la cámara que agrupa al sector, creció 7% en los tres primeros meses de 2013. De acuerdo con el último promedio, cada argentino come 59,7 kilos de carne por año.

El dato del último trimestre representa un cambio de signo. Afectado por la suba de precios, el consumo de carne estaba en baja desde 2010 (en 2009 se llegó a un techo de 70,3 kilos de carne por habitante en la Argentina).

De acuerdo con el informe de Ciccra, el cambio de tendencia en el consumo interno tiene que ver con que en el primer trimestre del año se produjo un 6,9% más y se exportó menos. Desde el sector, apuntan al atraso cambiario y a las retenciones de 15% para explicar las bajas en las ventas al exterior.

La faena vacuna en marzo se ubicó en torno de las 991 mil cabezas, 31.500 cabezas más que un año atrás. El aumento de la faena, en especial de ejemplares en edad reproductiva, causa preocupación en la industria cárnica por el impacto que esto tendrá sobre los futuros stock ganaderos y también los esquemas de precios de la hacienda. Así lo expresó ayer el titular de Ciccra, Miguel Schiariti: "El origen del aumento de la faena de hembras es el atraso en el precio de la hacienda en general y el precio de los terneros, en particular".

Desde Ciccra, temen que la inmovilidad registrada en los precios de la ganadería desde 2010 genere "nuevamente el inicio de un período de estancamiento del stock o la liquidación de vientres".



miércoles, 17 de abril de 2013

Criar vacas o inquilinos, aquí está la cuestión



"LA OLIGARQUÍA INMOBILIARIA" o “LA CRIA DE INQUILINOS: UNA ALTERNATIVA EFECTIVA A LA CRISIS DEL CAMPO”

La queja permanente de la oligarquía ganadera no hace sino desnudar la falta de imaginación de nuestros productores, que no saben tomar como modelo otras alternativas económicas como las que muchos sufren mes a mes y que se ha dado en llamar “La Oligarquía Inmobiliaria”

¿Cuánto cuesta alquilar un departamento de un dormitorio (de aproximadamente 50 m2) en Bahía Blanca? Entre $650 a $750, pongamos un promedio de $ 700. Allí podríamos apilar entre 2 a 3 estudiantes o 2 casados más un niño o un divorciado solo que no desea ser molestado.

Por otra parte, en una hectárea de campo y en nuestra zona, podemos tener entre una a dos vacas. Pongamos dos, entonces, seamos generosos. Y más que vacas, que sean bien machitos y castrados... novillos, bah. Contando desde que nació el ternerito hasta que lo vendimos listo para la parrilla nos llevará dos años, como para redondear. En ese tiempo y en nuestra hectárea lograremos -con suerte- vender 800 kg de carne a $ 4,00 el kilo (también con suerte). Eso nos dará un total de $ 3.200.

En el departamentito de 50 m2, la renta total de un contrato también de 2 años es de $ 16.800, osea: $336 por m2. En el campo (y en todas partes) una hectárea son 10.000 m2, por lo tanto la renta de un “contrato” de dos años son $0,32/m2. ¡¡Treinta y dos centavos el metro!!. Mil veces menos que la renta de un departamento.

La alternativa es clara: ¡HAY QUE CRIAR INQUILINOS!. A 50m2 cada uno (divorciado, estudiante o lo que se consiga en el mercado), nos caben 200 inquilinos por hectárea. Es una buena suma.

Lo único a tomar en cuenta para empezar es que tenemos que elegir un par de hectáreas cerca de la ruta, así los tipos pueden ir a trabajar. Y también hay que darle llaves de la tranquera. A todos. Son 200 llaves, pero bueno... en algo hay que invertir.

Las ventajas son muchas: el inquilino se alimenta solo, come por ahí o compra en una rotisería. No va a andar mugiendo para pedir pastura o fardo ni tampoco nos va a reclamar comida a nosotros. Si se enferma, casi seguro que tiene obra social, mientras que es obvio que una vaca no tiene esa posibilidad.

Los inquilinos no nos van a andar llenando el campo de porquerías, como desaprensivamente hace la vaca. Por el contrario, el pudor los hará irse a un rinconcito, donde sólo hay que tener la previsión de dejar crecer los yuyos.

A veces, los inquilinos se reproducen. La preñez dura 9 meses, igual que las vacas. Si queremos nos podemos quedar con el casalito y la cría, pero nos conviene hacerlos salir rápido del campo para que los pibes no se cuelguen del alambrado y alboroten nuestro consorcio rural. Total, tarde o temprano van a volver, porque con la ausencia de créditos, los inquilinos sólo engendran inquilinitos.

Algunos consideran como limitante que los inquilinos requieran ciertos servicios, como el agua, el gas y la electricidad. En esto tienen clara ventaja las vacas, porque también necesitan agua, es cierto, pero el gas lo producen ellas y de la electricidad no dicen ni “mu”. Sin embargo, la rentabilidad de la cría de inquilinos es tan buena, que hasta podría pensarse en un cablecito y un par de caños por hectárea. ¡Trescientos pesos por metro cuadrado dan para todo!. ¡Mil veces más ganancia que la carne! Si los inquilinos tienen frío que se agrupen, lo mismo si quieren ver Tinelli en un televisorcito. Las vacas también se agrupan en el bebedero y babean tanto como quien se estupidiza con “Bailando por un Sueño” o con un discurso presidencial, pero no hay que olvidar que la renta de la vaca es mucho menor. Además, no hay rumiante que compre celulares o “Reduce Fat Fast” o algo de lo que recomienda la tele y que es realmente importante para la economía del país.

Con respecto a las construcciones, siempre se puede hacer un techito con chapas y un par de paredes bajas, como las parideras de los chanchos y que les sirva de reparo. No se necesita nada más, porque recordemos que un inquilino debe estar todo el tiempo “tranqueras afuera” juntando para el alquiler, que es el producto de los inquilinos, como la lana de las ovejas o los jamones en los chanchos.

La vaca nos da la plata recién cuando la carneamos, es decir, a los dos años. En cambio el inquilino “gatilla” religiosamente del 1 al 5 de cada mes o nos tiene que devolver la llave de la tranquera.

Cuando el infeliz novillo termina su ciclo también termina muerto, mientras que el (también infeliz) inquilino termina su contrato fundido, pero en general respirando, a tal punto que la cría de inquilinos está fuertemente avalada por la Sociedad Protectora de los Animales. Por otra parte, a la vaca hay que reponerla para renovar el ciclo, mientras que al inquilino hay que re-ponersela de vuelta al renovarle el contrato... ¡¡y hasta nos pagará por eso!!.

Así que el consejo a todos los dueños de campo es éste: adhiéranse a la Oligarquía Inmobiliaria productora de inquilinos. Déjense de embromar con los problemas de pariciones, la lluvia, el pasto y las miradas bovinas y acusadoras de todos esos rumiantes yéndose al frigorífico. Si tienen mucho campo, usen un par de hectáreas para criar inquilinos y en el resto dejen crecer yuyos como la Soja o la González. Se imaginan que con esa rentabilidad, más que una 4x4 van a poder comprarse una 8x8 cada 2x3.

Para el país y su macro-economía, habría un solo problema a resolver: con las leyes actuales, no podemos comer inquilinos en un asadito y tampoco los podemos vender al exterior. Pero bueno,… ¿a quién le importa?. Producir o exportar alimentos no debe ser prioridad en nuestra Argentina. Fíjense que el campo y la producción ni un ministerio tienen, así que seguramente debe haber cosas más trascendentes en las que pensar.

ANDONI KLAUS ARANCIBIA

Software para fijar precios como una ventaja competitiva para una empresa

Segmentación y complejidad en fijación de precios

El Vice Presidente Senior de Pricing Excellence de PROS y co-autor de "The Price Advantage" discute la ventaja en software de fijación de precios para una empresa.