As Argentine inflation cools to single digits, residents are still skeptical
ARGENTINES say they are yet to feel the benefits of cooling inflation, as a five-month streak of slowing prices ended when official data on Friday showed inflation in June was higher than in May.
Since President Javier Milei took power late last year, inflation has slowed dramatically in Argentina, decelerating from 25.5 per cent in December to 4.2 per cent in May. June’s figure was 4.6 per cent.
The sharp fall has been attributed to a suite of cost-cutting and austerity measures that have put a lid on consumer demand, as well as measures to reduce money printing.
For many Argentines, the slowdown has not been enough to fend off the pain of high utility, transport and food prices in a country where the monthly minimum wage of 234,315 pesos (S$343) has failed to keep up with annual inflation of nearly 300 per cent.