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" But Buenos Aires also had poor outlying slums, called villa miserias, where hundreds of thousands of people lived in tin or cardboard shacks, a single tap providing water for fifty families. Their plight was made worse by an economy that funneled most of the country’s riches to a few hundred families and suffered from rampant unemployment, an exploding budget deficit, and a vigorous black market. "

Neal Bascomb , Hunting Eichmann: How a Band of Survivors and a Young Spy Agency Chased Down the World's Most Notorious Nazi


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Neal Bascomb quote : But Buenos Aires also had poor outlying slums, called villa miserias, where hundreds of thousands of people lived in tin or cardboard shacks, a single tap providing water for fifty families. Their plight was made worse by an economy that funneled most of the country’s riches to a few hundred families and suffered from rampant unemployment, an exploding budget deficit, and a vigorous black market.