Inflation ticked up in Jun., here's where prices rose most
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Moody's has raised Argentina's foreign and local currency credit rating from Caa3 to Caa1, also shifting the outlook from “stable” to “positive.” This upgrade reflects Moody's view that Argentina's broad liberalization of exchange and capital controls,
There’s good news out of Argentina, where President Milei is presiding over efforts to tame inflation and strengthen the country’s currency. Inflation last month fell, on a monthly basis, to the lowest level in five years.
Argentina's monthly inflation likely ticked up to 1.9% in June, according to the median forecast of a Reuters poll, after May's rise marked the lowest monthly increase since 2020. The month of May had marked the smallest monthly increase in five years for South America's No.
Argentina's National Institute of Statistics and Census (Indec) reported on Monday that inflation in June was 1.6%, marking the second-lowest monthly figure of the year. This brings the cumulative inflation for the first six months of 2025 to 15.
This essay explores Argentina’s crisis, reforms, outcomes, and challenges, drawing parallels with Pakistan’s ongoing economic struggles. Pakistan, facing similar issues of high inflation, debt dependency,
Argentina’s economy is rebounding fast. Inflation has plummeted, growth is back, and poverty is falling. Javier Milei’s shock reforms are delivering what few thought possible.
In Javier Milei's Argentina, falling inflation has stimulated a boom in car and real estate sales and foreign-bound planes take off laden with tourists.
Investors in Argentina began to anticipate a subtle policy change as President Javier Milei seemed to ease his control of how many pesos circulate in the economy, a trade-off between inflation and economic growth ahead of October midterm elections.
President Javier Milei, who has slashed public spending by 30% since taking office in 2023, vowed to veto the legislation.
June inflation came in at 1.6 percent, slightly up from May's 1.5 percent, which had been the lowest rate in five years, the INDEC national statistics bureau said.
Argentine President Javier Milei and his vice-president, Victoria Villarruel, have engaged in a bitter public war of words over plans to increase pensions. Milei shared posts on X in which his running mate had been called "stupid" and described as "a traitor", and in response Villarruel told the president to "grow up".