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Inflation fears confirmed as analysts raise 2022 forecasts

Prices jumped 7.4% in July alone – highest since 2002 – and have risen by 71%over the last 12 months, INDEC confirms.

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Inflation in Argentina continues to be unstoppabl­e: consumer prices increased by 7.4 percent in July alone, breaking a 20-year record, official data has revealed.

The news, which underlines the government’s continued inability to tamper down runaway hikes, means prices rose last month at the fastest pace since 2002 and are up by a cumulative 46.2 percent so far in 2022.

According to the data, released by the INDEC national statistics bureau on Thursday, Argentine families paid 71 percent more for their purchases than in last July. Over that 12-month period, the largest increases have been registered in clothing and footwear (96.7 percent), restaurant­s and hotels (90.6 percent), health (72.1 percent), and food (70.6 percent).

July’s figure rise was in line with the calculatio­ns of private consultant­s, who are already projecting that price increases will surpass 90 percent by 2022. Some recent reports have even forecast a rate of three digits.

This news prompted the Central Bank to raise rates again, which placed the yield on fixed-term deposits at around 98 percent.

Shortly after taking office, new Economy Minister Sergio Massa had anticipate­d that inflation data for July and August would be bad. In view of the situation, the government has convened the Minimum Wage Council (SMV) for August 22 in order to update values. In addition, it will try to reach a 60-day price and wage agreement with employers and trade union confederat­ions in order to stabilise the social situation and provide certainty.

Food prices are of particular concern and rose by six percent last month alone. The strongest increases were observed in fruit, vegetables and grocery products, including onions (57.9 percent), lettuce (40.5 percent), sweet potatoes (36.5 percent), sugar (30.5 percent), among others.

Items linked to the winter holidays also had a strong impact on the overall price increase, with Recreation and Culture rising 13.2 percent and Restaurant­s and Hotels up 9.8 percent.

Argentina, the third largest economy in Latin America, has suffered for years from very high inflation, with prices rising 50.9 percent last year. But price increases have soared even further this year, pushed by political instabilit­y and global inflationa­ry pressures following the outbreak of war in Ukraine.

The consumer price index is expected to close this year with an annualised increase of more than 90 percent, according to the most recent survey of market expectatio­ns conducted by the Central Bank.

Along with soaring inflation, the nation’s currency, the peso, is also under strong pressure, despite the tightening of exchange controls since 2019.

The official exchange rate stood at 140.98 pesos to the dollar on Thursday, but the US currency traded at around 297 pesos to the dollar on the black market.

As part of a massive Us$44billion debt restructur­ing deal, Argentina’s government committed to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund that it would reduce its fiscal deficit from three percent of GDP in 2021 to 2.5 per cent this year, followed by 1.9 per cent in 2023 and 0.9 per cent in 2024.

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