Procurement Tenders in Argentina
Tenderal tracks 74 live procurement tenders in Argentina across sectors including Infrastructure, Energy, Transport, Education, Finance, Water, ICT, Environment. Sources include the World Bank, regional development banks, EU TED, bilateral donors (KfW, AFD, GIZ, USAID, NORAD, SIDA, DANIDA), and Argentina's own national procurement portal where available. New tenders added every 24 hours. Free to browse — paid plans unlock daily email alerts and AI-generated bid briefs.
Latest tenders (top 30)
Country investment context — Argentina
Risk and governance indicators that affect bidding on tenders in Argentina. Data sourced from Fitch, Transparency International, World Justice Project, World Bank, and Open Contracting Partnership.
All figures from public 3rd-party datasets. Tenderal does not produce or audit ratings. Verify with original sources before bidding decisions.
Doing business in Argentina
Practical context for bidders — legal system, dispute resolution, ownership, working customs.
i How to read these ratings click to expand
A bidder's quick reference — what each scale means in plain English.
💳 Sovereign credit rating (Fitch / Moody's / S&P)
- AAA / AA — Highest quality. Very low default risk. Government will pay.
- A — High quality. Low risk. Usually safe for multi-year contracts.
- BBB — Investment grade floor. Adequate quality. Most large funds will lend here.
- BB / B — Speculative ("junk"). Substantial risk; require payment milestones, escrow, or letters of credit.
- CCC / CC / C — Distressed. Real risk of default; price work accordingly or skip.
- Outlook: Positive = upgrade likely, Stable = no change expected, Negative = downgrade likely, Watch = imminent action.
🛡️ Corruption Perceptions Index (Transparency International)
- Scale 0–100, higher = cleaner. Annual update each January.
- 70+ = very clean (Denmark 90, Finland 87, Sweden 80, Norway 81)
- 50–69 = moderate (Germany 75, UK 71, France 67, USA 65, Chile 63)
- 35–49 = significant corruption risk in procurement (India 38, Indonesia 37, Ukraine 35, Brazil 34)
- Below 35 = high corruption — expect to need extra compliance, local agent, anti-bribery audit (Pakistan 27, Nigeria 26, Bangladesh 23)
⚖️ Rule of Law Index (World Justice Project)
- Scale 0–1, higher = stronger. Measures how predictably contracts are enforced and rights protected.
- 0.75+ = strong — courts work, contracts enforceable on a sane timeline
- 0.60–0.74 = moderate — courts mostly work but slow or expensive
- 0.45–0.59 = weak — disputes can drag on for years; arbitration clause essential
- Below 0.45 = very weak — court enforcement is mostly theoretical; consider international arbitration jurisdiction (Singapore, London, Paris ICC)
🏛️ Political stability (World Bank Worldwide Governance)
- Percentile rank 0–100. 70+ = stable, 40–69 = moderate, 20–39 = unstable, below 20 = high risk of political shock (regime change, coup, sanctions, war).
📜 Contract enforcement (World Bank Doing Business)
- How long it takes to enforce a contract via the courts, in days, plus court costs as % of the claim. Global average: ~600 days and ~30% of claim. Anything below means smoother litigation; anything above means budget for delay and legal fees.
💸 Total tax burden (PwC)
- Estimated total taxes (corporate, payroll, social, other) as % of profit for a typical large business. Global average: ~40%. Tax treaties with your home country can reduce withholding on cross-border payments significantly.
🌐 Trade & treaties
- WTO membership = subject to international dispute settlement. BITs (Bilateral Investment Treaties) = direct legal protections for foreign investors from countries that have signed them. 50+ BITs = strong network. Below 20 = relatively isolated; check if a BIT exists between this country and yours before bidding.
📊 Procurement transparency (Open Contracting Partnership)
- Very High / High = awards, contracts, payments are published in machine-readable form (Ukraine Prozorro, Chile MercadoPúblico, Colombia SECOP II). Moderate / Low = data exists but is partial, paywalled, or scattered.
How to use this in practice: for a multi-year infrastructure contract, sovereign rating + political stability matter most.
For a 6-month consultancy, CPI + rule of law matter more.
For donor-funded work (WB, ADB, EBRD), the donor's safeguards substantially reduce all the country risks above.
All figures sourced from public 3rd-party datasets and refreshed quarterly (sovereign ratings, FX) and annually (governance indices). Tenderal does not audit ratings; verify with original source before any bidding decision.
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