Perfil (Sabado)

Peso devaluatio­n slows in attempt to curb inflation

- BY PATRICK GILLESPIE & IGNACIO OLIVERA DOLL

Argentina’s currency depreciate­d the least in 17 months as the government stepped up efforts to curb inflation ahead of midterm elections.

The peso lost 1.1 percent of its value against the US dollar in June, its smallest decline since January 2020, President Fernández’s first full month in office.

Policy makers see slower peso depreciati­on, managed by the Central Bank in a so-called crawling peg, as a key tool to curb rising inflation expectatio­ns. That’s a shift from the government’s focus earlier this year on negotiatin­g pay increases with labour unions that aligned with the government’s 29 percent inflation target.

Consumer prices rose almost 50 percent in May from a year earlier, the fastest pace since before the pandemic.some investors say the approach risks spurring more pent-up inflation and paving the way for a sharp devaluatio­n next year, once the November midterms are over.

Dollar-linked peso-denominate­d bonds maturing in 2022 are trading at lower yields than those due later this year, with brokers saying that’s a sign investors are pricing in a devaluatio­n.

“The government will have to devalue and narrow the currency gap whether or not they win or lose elections,” says Leonardo Svirsky, head of sales and trading at Buenos Aires-based Bull Market Brokers.

Devaluing would bring Argentina’s official exchange rate closer to the weaker parallel rates, which influence inflation expectatio­ns. In unregulate­d markets, the dollar trades about 75 percent more expensive than the official rate.

PRICE CONTROLS

Economy Minister Martín Guzmán has already rejected the idea of a steep devaluatio­n.

“There’s no expectatio­n that there’d be a devaluatio­n after the elections,” Guzmán said June 23 in a local TV interview. A Central Bank spokesman deferred questions on inflation policy to the Economy Ministry, which declined to comment.

To be sure, the government is relying on several other unorthodox tools to mitigate inflation, including subsidies and price controls on a range of items, such as household utilities, gas, public transit and some food products.

Economists say the slower devaluatio­n, price controls and the government’s money printing are stockpilin­g higher inflation for the future. For example, the peso has only lost 12 percent of its value so far this year, while consumer prices are up 22 percent over the same period. The exchange rate’s decline will need to catch up with the pace of prices.

“After the elections in November, the exchange rate depreciati­on is going to start to accelerate,” says Lorena Giorgio, chief economist at Buenos Aires-based consulting firm Equilibra.

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