Lower sales abroad could mean a glut domestically.
Exports of Argentine wine industry entered a downward trend from 2008 that showed signs of reversal in 2011. Wine exports fell by 33.7% between 2008 and 2010, showed a slight contraction of 1.1% for the first 4 months of 2011.Esto is mainly explained by lower sales of varietal wines without mentioning or table due to its progressive replacement by other drinks, beer in most cases.
Look graphically in wine exports
In the case of the varietal, which is a segment of "high end", the situation is different. The contraction is not as pronounced but begins to show a sort of "saturation" in the lawsuit against rising costs of production in Argentina.
After the crisis in the U.S., consumers in developed countries reduced consumption of high quality wines, coming mainly from France, Italy and the western U.S., so were open to wines from other regions with similar quality but lower prices. In that sense, Argentine wines, Chilean, Australian and South Africans were favored.
Our country could use the opportunity while it managed to surpass Chile in 2010 as a U.S. supplier, with the trans-Andean country a more traditional Argentina provider in that market. This was possible not only through the imposition of a hallmark, which accounts for the quality and uniqueness of Argentine wine, but production at competitive prices.
Currently, the cost growth of the wine industry shows some difficulties in continuing the expansion path of the last decade varietals. The decline in export volume accounts for this phenomenon. So far, the rise in average export price has partly offset the drop in volumes. However, it could begin to see a saturation of the domestic market from a greater supply dunk it impossible to put production in the world.
Exports of Argentine wine industry entered a downward trend from 2008 that showed signs of reversal in 2011. Wine exports fell by 33.7% between 2008 and 2010, showed a slight contraction of 1.1% for the first 4 months of 2011.Esto is mainly explained by lower sales of varietal wines without mentioning or table due to its progressive replacement by other drinks, beer in most cases.
Look graphically in wine exports
In the case of the varietal, which is a segment of "high end", the situation is different. The contraction is not as pronounced but begins to show a sort of "saturation" in the lawsuit against rising costs of production in Argentina.
After the crisis in the U.S., consumers in developed countries reduced consumption of high quality wines, coming mainly from France, Italy and the western U.S., so were open to wines from other regions with similar quality but lower prices. In that sense, Argentine wines, Chilean, Australian and South Africans were favored.
Our country could use the opportunity while it managed to surpass Chile in 2010 as a U.S. supplier, with the trans-Andean country a more traditional Argentina provider in that market. This was possible not only through the imposition of a hallmark, which accounts for the quality and uniqueness of Argentine wine, but production at competitive prices.
Currently, the cost growth of the wine industry shows some difficulties in continuing the expansion path of the last decade varietals. The decline in export volume accounts for this phenomenon. So far, the rise in average export price has partly offset the drop in volumes. However, it could begin to see a saturation of the domestic market from a greater supply dunk it impossible to put production in the world.