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The dataset generation failed because of a cast error
Error code:   DatasetGenerationCastError
Exception:    DatasetGenerationCastError
Message:      An error occurred while generating the dataset

All the data files must have the same columns, but at some point there are 1 missing columns ({'Unnamed: 0'})

This happened while the csv dataset builder was generating data using

hf://datasets/josedanielaromi/Arg2000/data1.csv (at revision 24ff70d325b2eb3825f0f08462d0c275903f0647)

Please either edit the data files to have matching columns, or separate them into different configurations (see docs at https://hf.co/docs/hub/datasets-manual-configuration#multiple-configurations)
Traceback:    Traceback (most recent call last):
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 2011, in _prepare_split_single
                  writer.write_table(table)
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/arrow_writer.py", line 585, in write_table
                  pa_table = table_cast(pa_table, self._schema)
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/table.py", line 2302, in table_cast
                  return cast_table_to_schema(table, schema)
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/table.py", line 2256, in cast_table_to_schema
                  raise CastError(
              datasets.table.CastError: Couldn't cast
              text: string
              -- schema metadata --
              pandas: '{"index_columns": [{"kind": "range", "name": null, "start": 0, "' + 368
              to
              {'Unnamed: 0': Value(dtype='int64', id=None), 'text': Value(dtype='string', id=None)}
              because column names don't match
              
              During handling of the above exception, another exception occurred:
              
              Traceback (most recent call last):
                File "/src/services/worker/src/worker/job_runners/config/parquet_and_info.py", line 1321, in compute_config_parquet_and_info_response
                  parquet_operations = convert_to_parquet(builder)
                File "/src/services/worker/src/worker/job_runners/config/parquet_and_info.py", line 935, in convert_to_parquet
                  builder.download_and_prepare(
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 1027, in download_and_prepare
                  self._download_and_prepare(
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 1122, in _download_and_prepare
                  self._prepare_split(split_generator, **prepare_split_kwargs)
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 1882, in _prepare_split
                  for job_id, done, content in self._prepare_split_single(
                File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 2013, in _prepare_split_single
                  raise DatasetGenerationCastError.from_cast_error(
              datasets.exceptions.DatasetGenerationCastError: An error occurred while generating the dataset
              
              All the data files must have the same columns, but at some point there are 1 missing columns ({'Unnamed: 0'})
              
              This happened while the csv dataset builder was generating data using
              
              hf://datasets/josedanielaromi/Arg2000/data1.csv (at revision 24ff70d325b2eb3825f0f08462d0c275903f0647)
              
              Please either edit the data files to have matching columns, or separate them into different configurations (see docs at https://hf.co/docs/hub/datasets-manual-configuration#multiple-configurations)

Need help to make the dataset viewer work? Make sure to review how to configure the dataset viewer, and open a discussion for direct support.

Unnamed: 0
int64
text
string
0
<s>[INST] accountid=28034 Abstract: I refer to the page-one article "Argentina Cries Foul [/INST] as Choice Employers Beat a Path Next Door" May 2. The story generalizes a few local, prejudiced opinions that have dominated a few sectors of the media in the past, without reflecting the extremely positive developments in the Brazilian-Argentine relationship. Many of those views have nothing to do with the present realities of the integration and were in fact linked to the Argentine economy's competitive problems. </s>
1
<s>[INST] proquest.com/docview/398709970? accountid=28034 Abstract: I refer to the page-one article "Argentina Cries Foul [/INST] as Choice Employers Beat a Path Next Door" May 2. The story generalizes a few local, prejudiced opinions that have dominated a few sectors of the media in the past, without reflecting the extremely positive developments in the Brazilian-Argentine relationship. </s>
2
<s>[INST] The story generalizes a few local, prejudiced opinions that have dominated a few sectors of the [/INST] media in the past, without reflecting the extremely positive developments in the Brazilian-Argentine relationship. Many of those views have nothing to do with the present realities of the integration and were in fact linked to the Argentine economy's competitive problems. Most of the "issues" described are in fact not new, and have been satisfactorily dealt with in the recent phase of dialogue and understanding between our two countries. </s>
3
<s>[INST] accountid=28034 Abstract: I refer to the page-one article "Argentina Cries Foul as Choice Employers Beat a Path Next Door" May 2. The story generalizes a few local, prejudiced opinions that have dominated a few sectors of the [/INST] media in the past, without reflecting the extremely positive developments in the Brazilian-Argentine relationship. Many of those views have nothing to do with the present realities of the integration and were in fact linked to the Argentine economy's competitive problems. </s>
4
<s>[INST] Many of those views have nothing to do with the present realities of the [/INST] integration and were in fact linked to the Argentine economy's competitive problems. Most of the "issues" described are in fact not new, and have been satisfactorily dealt with in the recent phase of dialogue and understanding between our two countries. Full text: I refer to the page-one article "Argentina Cries Foul as Choice Employers Beat a Path Next Door" May 2. </s>
5
<s>[INST] The story generalizes a few local, prejudiced opinions that have dominated a few sectors of the media in the past, without reflecting the extremely positive developments in the Brazilian-Argentine relationship. Many of those views have nothing to do with the present realities of the [/INST] integration and were in fact linked to the Argentine economy's competitive problems. Most of the "issues" described are in fact not new, and have been satisfactorily dealt with in the recent phase of dialogue and understanding between our two countries. </s>
6
<s>[INST] Most of the "issues" described are in fact not new, and have been satisfactorily dealt [/INST] with in the recent phase of dialogue and understanding between our two countries. Full text: I refer to the page-one article "Argentina Cries Foul as Choice Employers Beat a Path Next Door" May 2. The story generalizes a few local, prejudiced opinions that have dominated a few sectors of the media in the past, without reflecting the extremely positive developments in the Brazilian-Argentine relationship. </s>
7
<s>[INST] Many of those views have nothing to do with the present realities of the integration and were in fact linked to the Argentine economy's competitive problems. Most of the "issues" described are in fact not new, and have been satisfactorily dealt [/INST] with in the recent phase of dialogue and understanding between our two countries. Full text: I refer to the page-one article "Argentina Cries Foul as Choice Employers Beat a Path Next Door" May 2. </s>
8
<s>[INST] Full text: I refer to the page-one article "Argentina Cries Foul [/INST] as Choice Employers Beat a Path Next Door" May 2. The story generalizes a few local, prejudiced opinions that have dominated a few sectors of the media in the past, without reflecting the extremely positive developments in the Brazilian-Argentine relationship. Many of those views have nothing to do with the present realities of the integration and were in fact linked to the Argentine economy's competitive problems. </s>
9
<s>[INST] Most of the "issues" described are in fact not new, and have been satisfactorily dealt with in the recent phase of dialogue and understanding between our two countries. Full text: I refer to the page-one article "Argentina Cries Foul [/INST] as Choice Employers Beat a Path Next Door" May 2. The story generalizes a few local, prejudiced opinions that have dominated a few sectors of the media in the past, without reflecting the extremely positive developments in the Brazilian-Argentine relationship. </s>
10
<s>[INST] The story generalizes a few local, prejudiced opinions that have dominated a few sectors of the [/INST] media in the past, without reflecting the extremely positive developments in the Brazilian-Argentine relationship. Many of those views have nothing to do with the present realities of the integration and were in fact linked to the Argentine economy's competitive problems. Most of the "issues" described are in fact not new, and have been satisfactorily dealt with in the recent phase of dialogue and understanding between our two countries. </s>
11
<s>[INST] Full text: I refer to the page-one article "Argentina Cries Foul as Choice Employers Beat a Path Next Door" May 2. The story generalizes a few local, prejudiced opinions that have dominated a few sectors of the [/INST] media in the past, without reflecting the extremely positive developments in the Brazilian-Argentine relationship. Many of those views have nothing to do with the present realities of the integration and were in fact linked to the Argentine economy's competitive problems. </s>
12
<s>[INST] Many of those views have nothing to do with the present realities of the [/INST] integration and were in fact linked to the Argentine economy's competitive problems. Most of the "issues" described are in fact not new, and have been satisfactorily dealt with in the recent phase of dialogue and understanding between our two countries. The agreement recently reached between Brazil and Argentina in the automotive sector and, more importantly, the April 28 bilateral agreement aimed at establishing common macroeconomic targets for the four member states are, in the article in question, submerged beneath a long recitation of parochial and outdated complaints that certainly do not reflect the present positions of the main actors in the integration process. </s>
13
<s>[INST] The story generalizes a few local, prejudiced opinions that have dominated a few sectors of the media in the past, without reflecting the extremely positive developments in the Brazilian-Argentine relationship. Many of those views have nothing to do with the present realities of the [/INST] integration and were in fact linked to the Argentine economy's competitive problems. Most of the "issues" described are in fact not new, and have been satisfactorily dealt with in the recent phase of dialogue and understanding between our two countries. </s>
14
<s>[INST] Most of the "issues" described are in fact not new, and have been satisfactorily dealt [/INST] with in the recent phase of dialogue and understanding between our two countries. The agreement recently reached between Brazil and Argentina in the automotive sector and, more importantly, the April 28 bilateral agreement aimed at establishing common macroeconomic targets for the four member states are, in the article in question, submerged beneath a long recitation of parochial and outdated complaints that certainly do not reflect the present positions of the main actors in the integration process. The governments and the most important business sector entities are working together in this endeavor, building a deep union by means of the establishment of important joint mechanisms that will foster solutions to the present and future trade frictions among the four countries. </s>
15
<s>[INST] Many of those views have nothing to do with the present realities of the integration and were in fact linked to the Argentine economy's competitive problems. Most of the "issues" described are in fact not new, and have been satisfactorily dealt [/INST] with in the recent phase of dialogue and understanding between our two countries. The agreement recently reached between Brazil and Argentina in the automotive sector and, more importantly, the April 28 bilateral agreement aimed at establishing common macroeconomic targets for the four member states are, in the article in question, submerged beneath a long recitation of parochial and outdated complaints that certainly do not reflect the present positions of the main actors in the integration process. </s>
16
<s>[INST] The agreement recently reached between Brazil and Argentina in the automotive sector and, more importantly, the April 28 bilateral agreement aimed at establishing common macroeconomic targets for the four member states are, [/INST] in the article in question, submerged beneath a long recitation of parochial and outdated complaints that certainly do not reflect the present positions of the main actors in the integration process. The governments and the most important business sector entities are working together in this endeavor, building a deep union by means of the establishment of important joint mechanisms that will foster solutions to the present and future trade frictions among the four countries. It should not be necessary to tell North Americans, who are implementing the Nafta agreements, how normal such frictions are in a close economic relationship among different markets. </s>
17
<s>[INST] Most of the "issues" described are in fact not new, and have been satisfactorily dealt with in the recent phase of dialogue and understanding between our two countries. The agreement recently reached between Brazil and Argentina in the automotive sector and, more importantly, the April 28 bilateral agreement aimed at establishing common macroeconomic targets for the four member states are, [/INST] in the article in question, submerged beneath a long recitation of parochial and outdated complaints that certainly do not reflect the present positions of the main actors in the integration process. The governments and the most important business sector entities are working together in this endeavor, building a deep union by means of the establishment of important joint mechanisms that will foster solutions to the present and future trade frictions among the four countries. </s>
18
<s>[INST] The governments and the most important business sector entities are working together in this endeavor, building a deep union by means of [/INST] the establishment of important joint mechanisms that will foster solutions to the present and future trade frictions among the four countries. It should not be necessary to tell North Americans, who are implementing the Nafta agreements, how normal such frictions are in a close economic relationship among different markets. Rubens Antonio Barbosa Ambassador Brazilian Embassy Washington </s>
19
<s>[INST] The agreement recently reached between Brazil and Argentina in the automotive sector and, more importantly, the April 28 bilateral agreement aimed at establishing common macroeconomic targets for the four member states are, in the article in question, submerged beneath a long recitation of parochial and outdated complaints that certainly do not reflect the present positions of the main actors in the integration process. The governments and the most important business sector entities are working together in this endeavor, building a deep union by means of [/INST] the establishment of important joint mechanisms that will foster solutions to the present and future trade frictions among the four countries. It should not be necessary to tell North Americans, who are implementing the Nafta agreements, how normal such frictions are in a close economic relationship among different markets. </s>
20
<s>[INST] accountid=28034 Abstract: Squads of unemployed laborers, wielding signs that read "Made in Brazil -- [/INST] No," have taken to the streets to call for a "Buy Argentine" campaign. A normally staid Buenos Aires public-affairs TV show recently erupted into a shouting match when union leaders confronted business executives who were comparing Argentina's investment climate unfavorably to Brazil's. And a local radio host, speaking by phone to an Argentine husband-and-wife consulting team, denounced them on air as traitors for working with Brazilian industrial promoters. </s>
21
<s>[INST] proquest.com/docview/398715143? accountid=28034 Abstract: Squads of unemployed laborers, wielding signs that read "Made in Brazil -- [/INST] No," have taken to the streets to call for a "Buy Argentine" campaign. A normally staid Buenos Aires public-affairs TV show recently erupted into a shouting match when union leaders confronted business executives who were comparing Argentina's investment climate unfavorably to Brazil's. </s>
22
<s>[INST] A normally staid Buenos Aires public-affairs TV show recently erupted into a shouting match when [/INST] union leaders confronted business executives who were comparing Argentina's investment climate unfavorably to Brazil's. And a local radio host, speaking by phone to an Argentine husband-and-wife consulting team, denounced them on air as traitors for working with Brazilian industrial promoters. In the past year, a Who's Who of multinationals, from Philips Electronics NV to Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., along with a host of Argentine companies, have shifted production to Brazil from Argentina, taking thousands of jobs with them. </s>
23
<s>[INST] accountid=28034 Abstract: Squads of unemployed laborers, wielding signs that read "Made in Brazil -- No," have taken to the streets to call for a "Buy Argentine" campaign. A normally staid Buenos Aires public-affairs TV show recently erupted into a shouting match when [/INST] union leaders confronted business executives who were comparing Argentina's investment climate unfavorably to Brazil's. And a local radio host, speaking by phone to an Argentine husband-and-wife consulting team, denounced them on air as traitors for working with Brazilian industrial promoters. </s>
24
<s>[INST] And a local radio host, speaking by phone to an Argentine husband-and-wife consulting team, [/INST] denounced them on air as traitors for working with Brazilian industrial promoters. In the past year, a Who's Who of multinationals, from Philips Electronics NV to Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., along with a host of Argentine companies, have shifted production to Brazil from Argentina, taking thousands of jobs with them. "The Brazilians are like bad neighbors that come into our house to steal the furniture," says Buenos Aires state Gov. </s>
25
<s>[INST] A normally staid Buenos Aires public-affairs TV show recently erupted into a shouting match when union leaders confronted business executives who were comparing Argentina's investment climate unfavorably to Brazil's. And a local radio host, speaking by phone to an Argentine husband-and-wife consulting team, [/INST] denounced them on air as traitors for working with Brazilian industrial promoters. In the past year, a Who's Who of multinationals, from Philips Electronics NV to Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., along with a host of Argentine companies, have shifted production to Brazil from Argentina, taking thousands of jobs with them. </s>
26
<s>[INST] In the past year, a Who's Who of multinationals, from Philips Electronics NV to Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., along [/INST] with a host of Argentine companies, have shifted production to Brazil from Argentina, taking thousands of jobs with them. "The Brazilians are like bad neighbors that come into our house to steal the furniture," says Buenos Aires state Gov. Carlos Ruckauf, who has pledged to bar non-Argentine companies from state contracts. </s>
27
<s>[INST] And a local radio host, speaking by phone to an Argentine husband-and-wife consulting team, denounced them on air as traitors for working with Brazilian industrial promoters. In the past year, a Who's Who of multinationals, from Philips Electronics NV to Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., along [/INST] with a host of Argentine companies, have shifted production to Brazil from Argentina, taking thousands of jobs with them. "The Brazilians are like bad neighbors that come into our house to steal the furniture," says Buenos Aires state Gov. </s>
28
<s>[INST] "The Brazilians are like bad neighbors that come into our house [/INST] to steal the furniture," says Buenos Aires state Gov. Carlos Ruckauf, who has pledged to bar non-Argentine companies from state contracts. That's nonsense, say Brazilian officials, adding that Brazil has just done a better job than Argentina in managing its economy. </s>
29
<s>[INST] In the past year, a Who's Who of multinationals, from Philips Electronics NV to Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., along with a host of Argentine companies, have shifted production to Brazil from Argentina, taking thousands of jobs with them. "The Brazilians are like bad neighbors that come into our house [/INST] to steal the furniture," says Buenos Aires state Gov. Carlos Ruckauf, who has pledged to bar non-Argentine companies from state contracts. </s>
30
<s>[INST] Carlos Ruckauf, who has pledged to bar [/INST] non-Argentine companies from state contracts. That's nonsense, say Brazilian officials, adding that Brazil has just done a better job than Argentina in managing its economy. Since January 1999, when Brazil devalued its currency amid a financial crisis, wages and other costs of doing business there have plummeted. </s>
31
<s>[INST] "The Brazilians are like bad neighbors that come into our house to steal the furniture," says Buenos Aires state Gov. Carlos Ruckauf, who has pledged to bar [/INST] non-Argentine companies from state contracts. That's nonsense, say Brazilian officials, adding that Brazil has just done a better job than Argentina in managing its economy. </s>
32
<s>[INST] That's nonsense, say Brazilian officials, adding that Brazil has just done [/INST] a better job than Argentina in managing its economy. Since January 1999, when Brazil devalued its currency amid a financial crisis, wages and other costs of doing business there have plummeted. Many economists say those costs now are about 30% lower than in Argentina, which has pegged its currency at parity to the dollar since 1991. </s>
33
<s>[INST] Carlos Ruckauf, who has pledged to bar non-Argentine companies from state contracts. That's nonsense, say Brazilian officials, adding that Brazil has just done [/INST] a better job than Argentina in managing its economy. Since January 1999, when Brazil devalued its currency amid a financial crisis, wages and other costs of doing business there have plummeted. </s>
34
<s>[INST] Since January 1999, when Brazil devalued its currency amid a financial crisis, [/INST] wages and other costs of doing business there have plummeted. Many economists say those costs now are about 30% lower than in Argentina, which has pegged its currency at parity to the dollar since 1991. The peg has kept inflation in check, but has made Argentina an expensive place to run a company. </s>
35
<s>[INST] That's nonsense, say Brazilian officials, adding that Brazil has just done a better job than Argentina in managing its economy. Since January 1999, when Brazil devalued its currency amid a financial crisis, [/INST] wages and other costs of doing business there have plummeted. Many economists say those costs now are about 30% lower than in Argentina, which has pegged its currency at parity to the dollar since 1991. </s>
36
<s>[INST] Many economists say those costs now are about 30% lower than in Argentina, [/INST] which has pegged its currency at parity to the dollar since 1991. The peg has kept inflation in check, but has made Argentina an expensive place to run a company. Full text: BUENOS AIRES -- Up and down the wide boulevards of this proud capital, there are signs that Argentina's relationship with neighboring Brazil is on the rocks. </s>
37
<s>[INST] Since January 1999, when Brazil devalued its currency amid a financial crisis, wages and other costs of doing business there have plummeted. Many economists say those costs now are about 30% lower than in Argentina, [/INST] which has pegged its currency at parity to the dollar since 1991. The peg has kept inflation in check, but has made Argentina an expensive place to run a company. </s>
38
<s>[INST] The peg has kept inflation in check, but has made [/INST] Argentina an expensive place to run a company. Full text: BUENOS AIRES -- Up and down the wide boulevards of this proud capital, there are signs that Argentina's relationship with neighboring Brazil is on the rocks. Squads of unemployed laborers, wielding signs that read "Made in Brazil -- No," have taken to the streets to call for a "Buy Argentine" campaign. </s>
39
<s>[INST] Many economists say those costs now are about 30% lower than in Argentina, which has pegged its currency at parity to the dollar since 1991. The peg has kept inflation in check, but has made [/INST] Argentina an expensive place to run a company. Full text: BUENOS AIRES -- Up and down the wide boulevards of this proud capital, there are signs that Argentina's relationship with neighboring Brazil is on the rocks. </s>
40
<s>[INST] Full text: BUENOS AIRES -- Up and down the wide boulevards of this proud capital, [/INST] there are signs that Argentina's relationship with neighboring Brazil is on the rocks. Squads of unemployed laborers, wielding signs that read "Made in Brazil -- No," have taken to the streets to call for a "Buy Argentine" campaign. A normally staid Buenos Aires public-affairs TV show recently erupted into a shouting match when union leaders confronted business executives who were comparing Argentina's investment climate unfavorably to Brazil's. </s>
41
<s>[INST] The peg has kept inflation in check, but has made Argentina an expensive place to run a company. Full text: BUENOS AIRES -- Up and down the wide boulevards of this proud capital, [/INST] there are signs that Argentina's relationship with neighboring Brazil is on the rocks. Squads of unemployed laborers, wielding signs that read "Made in Brazil -- No," have taken to the streets to call for a "Buy Argentine" campaign. </s>
42
<s>[INST] Squads of unemployed laborers, wielding signs that read "Made in Brazil -- No," [/INST] have taken to the streets to call for a "Buy Argentine" campaign. A normally staid Buenos Aires public-affairs TV show recently erupted into a shouting match when union leaders confronted business executives who were comparing Argentina's investment climate unfavorably to Brazil's. And a local radio host, speaking by phone to an Argentine husband-and-wife consulting team, denounced them on air as traitors for working with Brazilian industrial promoters. </s>
43
<s>[INST] Full text: BUENOS AIRES -- Up and down the wide boulevards of this proud capital, there are signs that Argentina's relationship with neighboring Brazil is on the rocks. Squads of unemployed laborers, wielding signs that read "Made in Brazil -- No," [/INST] have taken to the streets to call for a "Buy Argentine" campaign. A normally staid Buenos Aires public-affairs TV show recently erupted into a shouting match when union leaders confronted business executives who were comparing Argentina's investment climate unfavorably to Brazil's. </s>
44
<s>[INST] A normally staid Buenos Aires public-affairs TV show recently erupted into a shouting match when [/INST] union leaders confronted business executives who were comparing Argentina's investment climate unfavorably to Brazil's. And a local radio host, speaking by phone to an Argentine husband-and-wife consulting team, denounced them on air as traitors for working with Brazilian industrial promoters. Why is anti-Brazilian feeling running so high? </s>
45
<s>[INST] Squads of unemployed laborers, wielding signs that read "Made in Brazil -- No," have taken to the streets to call for a "Buy Argentine" campaign. A normally staid Buenos Aires public-affairs TV show recently erupted into a shouting match when [/INST] union leaders confronted business executives who were comparing Argentina's investment climate unfavorably to Brazil's. And a local radio host, speaking by phone to an Argentine husband-and-wife consulting team, denounced them on air as traitors for working with Brazilian industrial promoters. </s>
46
<s>[INST] And a local radio host, speaking by phone to an Argentine husband-and-wife consulting team, [/INST] denounced them on air as traitors for working with Brazilian industrial promoters. Why is anti-Brazilian feeling running so high? It's simple: Argentina woke up one morning not long ago to find that some of its choicest employers had hit the road for Brazil, its main partner in Mercosur, the Latin American trade bloc. </s>
47
<s>[INST] A normally staid Buenos Aires public-affairs TV show recently erupted into a shouting match when union leaders confronted business executives who were comparing Argentina's investment climate unfavorably to Brazil's. And a local radio host, speaking by phone to an Argentine husband-and-wife consulting team, [/INST] denounced them on air as traitors for working with Brazilian industrial promoters. Why is anti-Brazilian feeling running so high? </s>
48
<s>[INST] It's simple: Argentina woke up one morning not long ago to find that some of its choicest employers [/INST] had hit the road for Brazil, its main partner in Mercosur, the Latin American trade bloc. In the past year, a Who's Who of multinationals, from Philips Electronics NV to Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., along with a host of Argentine companies, have shifted production to Brazil from Argentina, taking thousands of jobs with them. "The Brazilians are like bad neighbors that come into our house to steal the furniture," says Buenos Aires state Gov. </s>
49
<s>[INST] Why is anti-Brazilian feeling running so high? It's simple: Argentina woke up one morning not long ago to find that some of its choicest employers [/INST] had hit the road for Brazil, its main partner in Mercosur, the Latin American trade bloc. In the past year, a Who's Who of multinationals, from Philips Electronics NV to Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., along with a host of Argentine companies, have shifted production to Brazil from Argentina, taking thousands of jobs with them. </s>
50
<s>[INST] In the past year, a Who's Who of multinationals, from Philips Electronics NV to Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., along [/INST] with a host of Argentine companies, have shifted production to Brazil from Argentina, taking thousands of jobs with them. "The Brazilians are like bad neighbors that come into our house to steal the furniture," says Buenos Aires state Gov. Carlos Ruckauf, who has pledged to bar non-Argentine companies from state contracts. </s>
51
<s>[INST] It's simple: Argentina woke up one morning not long ago to find that some of its choicest employers had hit the road for Brazil, its main partner in Mercosur, the Latin American trade bloc. In the past year, a Who's Who of multinationals, from Philips Electronics NV to Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., along [/INST] with a host of Argentine companies, have shifted production to Brazil from Argentina, taking thousands of jobs with them. "The Brazilians are like bad neighbors that come into our house to steal the furniture," says Buenos Aires state Gov. </s>
52
<s>[INST] "The Brazilians are like bad neighbors that come into our house [/INST] to steal the furniture," says Buenos Aires state Gov. Carlos Ruckauf, who has pledged to bar non-Argentine companies from state contracts. That's nonsense, say Brazilian officials, adding that Brazil has just done a better job than Argentina in managing its economy. </s>
53
<s>[INST] In the past year, a Who's Who of multinationals, from Philips Electronics NV to Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., along with a host of Argentine companies, have shifted production to Brazil from Argentina, taking thousands of jobs with them. "The Brazilians are like bad neighbors that come into our house [/INST] to steal the furniture," says Buenos Aires state Gov. Carlos Ruckauf, who has pledged to bar non-Argentine companies from state contracts. </s>
54
<s>[INST] Carlos Ruckauf, who has pledged to bar [/INST] non-Argentine companies from state contracts. That's nonsense, say Brazilian officials, adding that Brazil has just done a better job than Argentina in managing its economy. Since January 1999, when Brazil devalued its currency amid a financial crisis, wages and other costs of doing business there have plummeted. </s>
55
<s>[INST] "The Brazilians are like bad neighbors that come into our house to steal the furniture," says Buenos Aires state Gov. Carlos Ruckauf, who has pledged to bar [/INST] non-Argentine companies from state contracts. That's nonsense, say Brazilian officials, adding that Brazil has just done a better job than Argentina in managing its economy. </s>
56
<s>[INST] That's nonsense, say Brazilian officials, adding that Brazil has just done [/INST] a better job than Argentina in managing its economy. Since January 1999, when Brazil devalued its currency amid a financial crisis, wages and other costs of doing business there have plummeted. Many economists say those costs now are about 30% lower than in Argentina, which has pegged its currency at parity to the dollar since 1991. </s>
57
<s>[INST] Carlos Ruckauf, who has pledged to bar non-Argentine companies from state contracts. That's nonsense, say Brazilian officials, adding that Brazil has just done [/INST] a better job than Argentina in managing its economy. Since January 1999, when Brazil devalued its currency amid a financial crisis, wages and other costs of doing business there have plummeted. </s>
58
<s>[INST] Since January 1999, when Brazil devalued its currency amid a financial crisis, [/INST] wages and other costs of doing business there have plummeted. Many economists say those costs now are about 30% lower than in Argentina, which has pegged its currency at parity to the dollar since 1991. The peg has kept inflation in check, but has made Argentina an expensive place to run a company. </s>
59
<s>[INST] That's nonsense, say Brazilian officials, adding that Brazil has just done a better job than Argentina in managing its economy. Since January 1999, when Brazil devalued its currency amid a financial crisis, [/INST] wages and other costs of doing business there have plummeted. Many economists say those costs now are about 30% lower than in Argentina, which has pegged its currency at parity to the dollar since 1991. </s>
60
<s>[INST] Many economists say those costs now are about 30% lower than in Argentina, [/INST] which has pegged its currency at parity to the dollar since 1991. The peg has kept inflation in check, but has made Argentina an expensive place to run a company. "There's just no way Argentina, with that currency, can keep pace with us anymore," says Paulo Mallmann, an economist at Banco Industrial & Comercial, in Sao Paulo, Brazil. </s>
61
<s>[INST] Since January 1999, when Brazil devalued its currency amid a financial crisis, wages and other costs of doing business there have plummeted. Many economists say those costs now are about 30% lower than in Argentina, [/INST] which has pegged its currency at parity to the dollar since 1991. The peg has kept inflation in check, but has made Argentina an expensive place to run a company. </s>
62
<s>[INST] The peg has kept inflation in check, but has made [/INST] Argentina an expensive place to run a company. "There's just no way Argentina, with that currency, can keep pace with us anymore," says Paulo Mallmann, an economist at Banco Industrial & Comercial, in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Some of the passions driving the dispute are rooted in a centuries-long rivalry. </s>
63
<s>[INST] Many economists say those costs now are about 30% lower than in Argentina, which has pegged its currency at parity to the dollar since 1991. The peg has kept inflation in check, but has made [/INST] Argentina an expensive place to run a company. "There's just no way Argentina, with that currency, can keep pace with us anymore," says Paulo Mallmann, an economist at Banco Industrial & Comercial, in Sao Paulo, Brazil. </s>
64
<s>[INST] "There's just no way Argentina, with that currency, can keep pace with us anymore," says [/INST] Paulo Mallmann, an economist at Banco Industrial & Comercial, in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Some of the passions driving the dispute are rooted in a centuries-long rivalry. Argentina and Brazil fought a war with each other in the 19th century, and even in more recent decades, southern Brazilian states built railroad tracks narrower than Argentina's to discourage any invasion. </s>
65
<s>[INST] The peg has kept inflation in check, but has made Argentina an expensive place to run a company. "There's just no way Argentina, with that currency, can keep pace with us anymore," says [/INST] Paulo Mallmann, an economist at Banco Industrial & Comercial, in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Some of the passions driving the dispute are rooted in a centuries-long rivalry. </s>
66
<s>[INST] Some of the passions driving the dispute [/INST] are rooted in a centuries-long rivalry. Argentina and Brazil fought a war with each other in the 19th century, and even in more recent decades, southern Brazilian states built railroad tracks narrower than Argentina's to discourage any invasion. Culturally, the two neighbors could hardly be more different. </s>
67
<s>[INST] "There's just no way Argentina, with that currency, can keep pace with us anymore," says Paulo Mallmann, an economist at Banco Industrial & Comercial, in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Some of the passions driving the dispute [/INST] are rooted in a centuries-long rivalry. Argentina and Brazil fought a war with each other in the 19th century, and even in more recent decades, southern Brazilian states built railroad tracks narrower than Argentina's to discourage any invasion. </s>
68
<s>[INST] Argentina and Brazil fought a war with each other in the 19th century, and even in more [/INST] recent decades, southern Brazilian states built railroad tracks narrower than Argentina's to discourage any invasion. Culturally, the two neighbors could hardly be more different. Argentina was one of the most prosperous nations in the world at the beginning of the 20th century, and even after decades of economic decline, its elites fancied themselves "South American Europeans". </s>
69
<s>[INST] Some of the passions driving the dispute are rooted in a centuries-long rivalry. Argentina and Brazil fought a war with each other in the 19th century, and even in more [/INST] recent decades, southern Brazilian states built railroad tracks narrower than Argentina's to discourage any invasion. Culturally, the two neighbors could hardly be more different. </s>
70
<s>[INST] Argentina was one of the most prosperous nations in the world at the beginning of the 20th [/INST] century, and even after decades of economic decline, its elites fancied themselves "South American Europeans". Brazil, which is three times as large as Argentina, has a more ethnically diverse population that includes large numbers of blacks, Indians and Asians. It also sees itself as occupying a unique niche in the world: "God is Brazilian," as one saying puts it. </s>
71
<s>[INST] Culturally, the two neighbors could hardly be more different. Argentina was one of the most prosperous nations in the world at the beginning of the 20th [/INST] century, and even after decades of economic decline, its elites fancied themselves "South American Europeans". Brazil, which is three times as large as Argentina, has a more ethnically diverse population that includes large numbers of blacks, Indians and Asians. </s>
72
<s>[INST] Brazil, which is three times as large as Argentina, has a more ethnically [/INST] diverse population that includes large numbers of blacks, Indians and Asians. It also sees itself as occupying a unique niche in the world: "God is Brazilian," as one saying puts it. Now, on top of the sizable cost advantage Brazil offers Argentine businessmen, its federal and local governments are aggressively marketing industrial incentives, including free land, as well as breaks on taxes and utilities. </s>
73
<s>[INST] Argentina was one of the most prosperous nations in the world at the beginning of the 20th century, and even after decades of economic decline, its elites fancied themselves "South American Europeans". Brazil, which is three times as large as Argentina, has a more ethnically [/INST] diverse population that includes large numbers of blacks, Indians and Asians. It also sees itself as occupying a unique niche in the world: "God is Brazilian," as one saying puts it. </s>
74
<s>[INST] It also sees itself as occupying a unique niche in the [/INST] world: "God is Brazilian," as one saying puts it. Now, on top of the sizable cost advantage Brazil offers Argentine businessmen, its federal and local governments are aggressively marketing industrial incentives, including free land, as well as breaks on taxes and utilities. Multilabel Argentina SA, a maker of adhesive labels, recently decided to locate a new plant in Sao Paulo, Brazil's biggest city, after local authorities there offered a slew of incentives, including cash bonuses if the plant attains certain production, hiring and export goals. </s>
75
<s>[INST] Brazil, which is three times as large as Argentina, has a more ethnically diverse population that includes large numbers of blacks, Indians and Asians. It also sees itself as occupying a unique niche in the [/INST] world: "God is Brazilian," as one saying puts it. Now, on top of the sizable cost advantage Brazil offers Argentine businessmen, its federal and local governments are aggressively marketing industrial incentives, including free land, as well as breaks on taxes and utilities. </s>
76
<s>[INST] Now, on top of the sizable cost advantage Brazil offers Argentine businessmen, its federal and local governments [/INST] are aggressively marketing industrial incentives, including free land, as well as breaks on taxes and utilities. Multilabel Argentina SA, a maker of adhesive labels, recently decided to locate a new plant in Sao Paulo, Brazil's biggest city, after local authorities there offered a slew of incentives, including cash bonuses if the plant attains certain production, hiring and export goals. Scoffing at Brazil's Argentine critics, Multilabel Vice President Juan Carlos Sacco says, "People think businessmen in Argentina shouldn't make money". </s>
77
<s>[INST] It also sees itself as occupying a unique niche in the world: "God is Brazilian," as one saying puts it. Now, on top of the sizable cost advantage Brazil offers Argentine businessmen, its federal and local governments [/INST] are aggressively marketing industrial incentives, including free land, as well as breaks on taxes and utilities. Multilabel Argentina SA, a maker of adhesive labels, recently decided to locate a new plant in Sao Paulo, Brazil's biggest city, after local authorities there offered a slew of incentives, including cash bonuses if the plant attains certain production, hiring and export goals. </s>
78
<s>[INST] Multilabel Argentina SA, a maker of adhesive labels, recently decided to locate a new plant in Sao Paulo, Brazil's biggest city, after [/INST] local authorities there offered a slew of incentives, including cash bonuses if the plant attains certain production, hiring and export goals. Scoffing at Brazil's Argentine critics, Multilabel Vice President Juan Carlos Sacco says, "People think businessmen in Argentina shouldn't make money". The job exodus has strained relations within the Mercosur customs union, which also includes Paraguay and Uruguay. </s>
79
<s>[INST] Now, on top of the sizable cost advantage Brazil offers Argentine businessmen, its federal and local governments are aggressively marketing industrial incentives, including free land, as well as breaks on taxes and utilities. Multilabel Argentina SA, a maker of adhesive labels, recently decided to locate a new plant in Sao Paulo, Brazil's biggest city, after [/INST] local authorities there offered a slew of incentives, including cash bonuses if the plant attains certain production, hiring and export goals. Scoffing at Brazil's Argentine critics, Multilabel Vice President Juan Carlos Sacco says, "People think businessmen in Argentina shouldn't make money". </s>
80
<s>[INST] Scoffing at Brazil's Argentine critics, Multilabel Vice President Juan Carlos Sacco [/INST] says, "People think businessmen in Argentina shouldn't make money". The job exodus has strained relations within the Mercosur customs union, which also includes Paraguay and Uruguay. Born in 1991, Mercosur has become South America's most successful effort at political and economic integration, but it has yet to develop an efficient means of settling disputes between members. </s>
81
<s>[INST] Multilabel Argentina SA, a maker of adhesive labels, recently decided to locate a new plant in Sao Paulo, Brazil's biggest city, after local authorities there offered a slew of incentives, including cash bonuses if the plant attains certain production, hiring and export goals. Scoffing at Brazil's Argentine critics, Multilabel Vice President Juan Carlos Sacco [/INST] says, "People think businessmen in Argentina shouldn't make money". The job exodus has strained relations within the Mercosur customs union, which also includes Paraguay and Uruguay. </s>
82
<s>[INST] The job exodus has strained relations within the Mercosur [/INST] customs union, which also includes Paraguay and Uruguay. Born in 1991, Mercosur has become South America's most successful effort at political and economic integration, but it has yet to develop an efficient means of settling disputes between members. Last week, Brazil and Argentina issued the Buenos Aires Declaration, a plan to establish common economic-policy targets and to beef up Mercosur's procedures for resolving trade complaints. </s>
83
<s>[INST] Scoffing at Brazil's Argentine critics, Multilabel Vice President Juan Carlos Sacco says, "People think businessmen in Argentina shouldn't make money". The job exodus has strained relations within the Mercosur [/INST] customs union, which also includes Paraguay and Uruguay. Born in 1991, Mercosur has become South America's most successful effort at political and economic integration, but it has yet to develop an efficient means of settling disputes between members. </s>
84
<s>[INST] Born in 1991, Mercosur has become South America's most successful effort at political and economic integration, [/INST] but it has yet to develop an efficient means of settling disputes between members. Last week, Brazil and Argentina issued the Buenos Aires Declaration, a plan to establish common economic-policy targets and to beef up Mercosur's procedures for resolving trade complaints. Brazilian diplomat Jose Botafogo Goncalves calls the declaration an effort "to clean up the house". </s>
85
<s>[INST] The job exodus has strained relations within the Mercosur customs union, which also includes Paraguay and Uruguay. Born in 1991, Mercosur has become South America's most successful effort at political and economic integration, [/INST] but it has yet to develop an efficient means of settling disputes between members. Last week, Brazil and Argentina issued the Buenos Aires Declaration, a plan to establish common economic-policy targets and to beef up Mercosur's procedures for resolving trade complaints. </s>
86
<s>[INST] Last week, Brazil and Argentina issued the Buenos Aires Declaration, a plan to establish [/INST] common economic-policy targets and to beef up Mercosur's procedures for resolving trade complaints. Brazilian diplomat Jose Botafogo Goncalves calls the declaration an effort "to clean up the house". Still, the trade bloc faces an uphill struggle. </s>
87
<s>[INST] Born in 1991, Mercosur has become South America's most successful effort at political and economic integration, but it has yet to develop an efficient means of settling disputes between members. Last week, Brazil and Argentina issued the Buenos Aires Declaration, a plan to establish [/INST] common economic-policy targets and to beef up Mercosur's procedures for resolving trade complaints. Brazilian diplomat Jose Botafogo Goncalves calls the declaration an effort "to clean up the house". </s>
88
<s>[INST] Brazilian diplomat Jose Botafogo Goncalves calls the declaration [/INST] an effort "to clean up the house". Still, the trade bloc faces an uphill struggle. "It took one major currency crisis to raise serious frictions," says Lawrence Pih, president of Moinhos Pacifico Ltd., a Sao Paulo flour miller. </s>
89
<s>[INST] Last week, Brazil and Argentina issued the Buenos Aires Declaration, a plan to establish common economic-policy targets and to beef up Mercosur's procedures for resolving trade complaints. Brazilian diplomat Jose Botafogo Goncalves calls the declaration [/INST] an effort "to clean up the house". Still, the trade bloc faces an uphill struggle. </s>
90
<s>[INST] "It took one major currency crisis to raise serious frictions," says Lawrence [/INST] Pih, president of Moinhos Pacifico Ltd., a Sao Paulo flour miller. For example, nearly two-thirds of the respondents in a recent poll by the Argentine newspaper Clarin identified the flight of jobs to Brazil as Argentina's No. 1 problem, as it struggles to overcome its worst recession in years. </s>
91
<s>[INST] Still, the trade bloc faces an uphill struggle. "It took one major currency crisis to raise serious frictions," says Lawrence [/INST] Pih, president of Moinhos Pacifico Ltd., a Sao Paulo flour miller. For example, nearly two-thirds of the respondents in a recent poll by the Argentine newspaper Clarin identified the flight of jobs to Brazil as Argentina's No. </s>
92
<s>[INST] For example, nearly two-thirds of the respondents in a recent poll by the Argentine [/INST] newspaper Clarin identified the flight of jobs to Brazil as Argentina's No. 1 problem, as it struggles to overcome its worst recession in years. In a metal shop in Hurlingham, a factory town near Buenos Aires, Gabriel DiMarco shakes his grease-stained hands in frustration as he talks about Brazil. </s>
93
<s>[INST] "It took one major currency crisis to raise serious frictions," says Lawrence Pih, president of Moinhos Pacifico Ltd., a Sao Paulo flour miller. For example, nearly two-thirds of the respondents in a recent poll by the Argentine [/INST] newspaper Clarin identified the flight of jobs to Brazil as Argentina's No. 1 problem, as it struggles to overcome its worst recession in years. </s>
94
<s>[INST] 1 problem, as it struggles to overcome [/INST] its worst recession in years. In a metal shop in Hurlingham, a factory town near Buenos Aires, Gabriel DiMarco shakes his grease-stained hands in frustration as he talks about Brazil. It is "an octopus that is sucking the life out of us," he says. </s>
95
<s>[INST] For example, nearly two-thirds of the respondents in a recent poll by the Argentine newspaper Clarin identified the flight of jobs to Brazil as Argentina's No. 1 problem, as it struggles to overcome [/INST] its worst recession in years. In a metal shop in Hurlingham, a factory town near Buenos Aires, Gabriel DiMarco shakes his grease-stained hands in frustration as he talks about Brazil. </s>
96
<s>[INST] In a metal shop in Hurlingham, a factory town near Buenos Aires, Gabriel [/INST] DiMarco shakes his grease-stained hands in frustration as he talks about Brazil. It is "an octopus that is sucking the life out of us," he says. The shutdown of a 70-year-old Goodyear plant, which transferred some production to Brazil, has idled shops like Mr. DiMarco's, which formerly supplied it, leaving the town's economy in shambles. </s>
97
<s>[INST] 1 problem, as it struggles to overcome its worst recession in years. In a metal shop in Hurlingham, a factory town near Buenos Aires, Gabriel [/INST] DiMarco shakes his grease-stained hands in frustration as he talks about Brazil. It is "an octopus that is sucking the life out of us," he says. </s>
98
<s>[INST] It is "an octopus that is sucking the [/INST] life out of us," he says. The shutdown of a 70-year-old Goodyear plant, which transferred some production to Brazil, has idled shops like Mr. DiMarco's, which formerly supplied it, leaving the town's economy in shambles. Brazilians maintain that Argentina, which has run a huge trade surplus with Brazil for the past five years, has nothing to complain about and is just making them scapegoats. </s>
99
<s>[INST] In a metal shop in Hurlingham, a factory town near Buenos Aires, Gabriel DiMarco shakes his grease-stained hands in frustration as he talks about Brazil. It is "an octopus that is sucking the [/INST] life out of us," he says. The shutdown of a 70-year-old Goodyear plant, which transferred some production to Brazil, has idled shops like Mr. DiMarco's, which formerly supplied it, leaving the town's economy in shambles. </s>
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