Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How an Argentine cooperative is empowering workers and entrepreneurs
How an Argentine cooperative is empowering workers and entrepreneurs
Dec 18, 2025 2:48 PM

(AtlasNetwork.org Photo / Rodrigo Abd)

Despite the once promising election of President Mauricio Macri, Argentina’s first non-Perónist leader in 13 years, the country has largely returned to its embrace of leftist economic policies, including recently imposed capital controls and interventionist price fixing. The results have not been positive.

Yet amid the constant meddling by legislators and government officials, everyday Argentinians are forging new paths of economic opportunity. While the top-down planners continue to tinker, the bottom-up searchers continue to innovate and serve, create and exchange.

In a short film from the Atlas Network, we get a small taste of that activity through Cooperativa La Juanita, a munity-based cooperative focused on practical, trades-based education and entrepreneurship.

Located in Buenos Aires’ La Matanza neighborhood, the cooperative was originally formed in resistance to a series of crisis-era government handouts—a way for workers and their families to maintain independence while creating new pathways for creative service in munities.

“What I love about the people of Cooperativa La Juanita is that these people want to get out of poverty with their own work. They did not accept subsidies,” explains Agustín Etchebarne, general director of Libertad y Progreso, a Buenos Aires think tank. “They want to train and see how productive work is achieved, and be included in society by their own efforts. What you see in La Juanita is something very unique in Argentina, and it is very inspiring.”

Daniel Anthony summarizes the story:

With a full slate of educational programming and growing business enterprises, the cooperative, which is located in a busy urban neighborhood about 5 miles outside of Argentina’s capital city, is filled with people of all ages, many of them actively engaged in learning new trades or skills.

The cooperative’s roots reflect mitment to entrepreneurship that is evident in the range of services, programs, and classes that residents can access. Begun in 2001, after a group of locals decided that they did not want to rely on government welfare handouts, today La Juanita features a bakery, a call center, a mechanical repair shop, catering services, and classes that teach people puting and animation techniques, beautician and barbering skills, music and dance, and even personal finance.

“We started as a cooperative formed by a group of unemployed workers who rejected the government cash transfers in the 2001 crisis, because we wanted to generate our own source of work and provide local people with a quality education,” said Silvia Flores, who was one of the founders of the cooperative and now serves as its executive director.

For some, La Juanita’s philosophical rejection of government assistance may seem excessive or unnecessary, but such independence has allowed workers to take more ownership and, as a result, find more meaning and purpose in the various enterprises.

For example, at La Masa Crítica, La Juanita’s onsite bakery, the founders were initially told by local officials that the business was doomed to fail. “When La Juanita was in its infancy, regional government administrators told La Juanita’s organizers that they couldn’t form a cooperative without a critical mass of support—and they openly doubted that the neighborhood could support the founders’ vision,” writes Anthony. “Fortunately, the bureaucrats were wrong.”

The bakery has instead seen great success, serving high-quality Argentine specialties at lower prices than petitors. But again, beyond any material fruits, bakery employees have discovered a new framework of work as service and munity has experienced a wide range of social benefits:

Today, the bakery is part of a strong and munity that serves the needs of thousands of local residents every year. e in at 4 am to bake the best bread in the neighborhood,” said Fabián Hamed, the cooperative’s president.

“It’s more than just a salary. Our colleagues know they are helping others—and because they are also earning money, they see the possibility of getting ahead.” Hamed, who also runs Potrero Digital, La Juanita’s technology and digital design management program, speaks proudly of one of his former students, Carlos, who now teaches baking skills to others. Hamed sees firsthand what a difference Carlos’s impact has on his peers in the neighborhood. “Thanks to Carlos, these guys have a future. They are not on the corner drinking alcohol or using drugs—they have skills and can get jobs.”

But while La Juanita has managed to cultivate munity that’s largely free from government interference, they have still faced their share of challenges that stem from poor policy decisions.

After the government imposed a 35 percent tariff on laptops and small electronics, for puter products cost nearly three times as much in Argentina as they would in the United States, or 50% more than in neighboring Chile, according to Reuters. This caused a significant strain on the country’s consumers and businesses alike. Given La Juanita’s reliance puters for its educational programming and call center business, the tariff had created several obstacles.

Fortunately, it was recently removed, allowing La Juanita to move farther faster in creating new opportunities for its students and workers. According to Etchebarne, whose think tank was instrumental in changing the policy, freer trade has already bolstered opportunity for many Argentinians. “Many people believe that public policy that puters cheaper is an abstract achievement,” he says. “But there is nothing abstract about creating new jobs for poor people.”

Here, even as we are inspired by the bottom-up initiative of those at La Juanita and other on-the-ground enterprises, we are reminded that the political dysfunction at the top still matters. One small price-fixing scheme can make life extremely difficult for a specific enterprises and institutions—just as removing it can bring plenty of new life.

La Juanita reminds us of the God-given dignity and abounding creative capacity of the human person—features that endure despite government abuse and interference. But it also reminds us to stay mindful that the fight for economic freedom matters, and not just for the material gain that’s bound to bring.

“In Juanita, lives are saved and, above all, souls are saved, through work and education, that always go hand in hand,” says Hamed. “The only thing we want is to be free, and that our children have opportunities that we could not have.”

Image: Used with Permission; Bakers of Panadería Comunitaria “La Masa Critica” in Cooperativa La Juanita (AtlasNetwork.org Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
PBR: History Casts Doubt
In response to the question, “What is wrong with socialism?” I can hardly do better than Pope John Paul II, who wrote in Centesimus Annus, “the fundamental error of socialism is anthropological in nature,” because socialism maintains, “that the good of the individual can be realized without reference to his free choice.” The socialist experiment is attractive because its model is the family, a situation in which each gives according to his ability and receives according to his need—and it...
Vatican Condemnation of anti-Semitism Unchanged Despite Misstep on Holocaust Denier
The pope has certainly earned his salary this week. In his attempt to heal a schism, he inadvertently set off a fire storm. As most everyone knows by now, the pontiff lifted the munication of four bishops illicitly ordained by the late Archbishop Marcel Lefevbre in 1988, whose dissent from the Second Vatican Council drew a small but fervent following. One of these bishops, Richard Williamson, is a holocaust denier. To understand the saga, it is necessary to peel back...
Dr. Andrew Abela Receives 2009 Novak Award
Maltese-American marketing professor, Dr. Andrew Abela, is the winner of the Acton Institute’s 2009 Novak Award. Dr. Abela’s main research areas include consumerism, marketing ethics, Catholic Social Teaching, and internal munication. Believing that anti-free market perspectives seem to dominate discussion about the social impact of business, Dr. Abela is working to explore Christian ethics further to show how these issues can be resolved more humanely and effectively through market-oriented approaches. To aid this work, Dr. Abela is currently preparing a...
PBR: The Faith-Based Initiative
Last week’s National Prayer Breakfast featured a speech by President Obama which was his most substantive address concerning the future of the faith-based initiative since his Zanesville, Ohio speech of July 2008. In the Zanesville speech, then-candidate Obama discussed “expansion” of the faith-based initiative, and some details were added as Obama announced his vision for the newly-named Office for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships. The announced priorities of the office are fourfold: The Office’s top priority will be munity groups an...
Acton Commentary: The Moral Bankruptcy Behind the Bailouts
Amid the Washington clamor for more and bigger bailouts, a few brave voices among elected officials and government veterans are being raised about the moral disaster looming behind massive government spending programs. If we ignore these warnings, writes Ray Nothstine in today’s Acton Commentary, we may be “continuing down a path that may usher in an ever greater financial crisis.” Read the mentary here and share ments below. ...
PBR: Monsma and Carlton-Thies Speak Out
In response to the question, “What is the future of the faith-based initiative?” As part of Christianity Today’s Speaking Out (web-only) feature, Stephen V. Monsma and Stanley Carlson-Thies, of Calvin College’s Henry Institute and the Center for Public Justice respectively, address the future of the faith-based initiative under President Obama. Monsma and Carlton-Thies outline five “encouraging signs” and one “major concern.” The encouraging signs include the naming of the office executive director (Joshua DuBois) and advisory council (including “recognized evangelicals”...
PBR: Socialism Tyrannizes
In response to the question, “What is wrong with socialism?” In answering this question we could point to the historical instances of socialist regimes and their abhorrent record on treatment of human beings. But the supporters of socialism might just as well argue that these examples are not truly relevant because each historical instance of socialism has particular contextual corruptions. Thus, these regimes have never really manifested the ideal that socialism offers. So on a more abstract or ideal level,...
Acton Commentary: Hollywood’s Radical Che Chic
Was the real Che Guevara a lover of “humanity, justice and truth”? In mentary today, Bruce Edward Walker reviews Steven Soderbergh’s new four-hour “Che” film epic and discovers “a cinematic paean to one of the twentieth-century’s most infamous butchers.” Read the mentary at the Acton Institute website. ...
More on ‘The Moral Bankruptcy Behind the Bailouts’
“Government budgets are moral documents,” is the often quoted line from Jim Wallis of Sojourners and other religious left leaders. Wallis also adds that “When politicians present their budgets, they are really presenting their priorities.” There is perhaps no better example of a spending bill lacking moral soundness than the current stimulus package being debated in the U.S. Senate. In mentary this week, “The Moral Bankruptcy Behind the Bailouts,” I offer clear reasons how spending more does not equate to...
Of Men, Mountains, and Mining
Here’s a brief report from The Environmental Report on mountain-top removal mining, and the increasing involvement of religious groups weighing in on the question. One of these groups is Christians for the Mountains. A quote by the group’s co-founder Allen Johnson was noteworthy, “We cannot destroy God’s creation in order to have a temporal economy.” One other thing that struck me about the interview is that the AmeriCorp involvement smacks of “rebranding” secular environmentalism. Add the magic words “creation care”...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved