Argentine President Javier Milei notched another economic victory Tuesday after data showed wholesale prices declined in May for the first time since the height of the pandemic, adding to his momentum before October midterm elections.
The producer price index fell 0.3 percent from April and rose 22.4 percent on the year, according data from the INDEC national statistics bureau. It’s a sharp turnaround from December 2023, Milei’s first month in office, when wholesale monthly prices soared 54 percent. The libertarian often uses the indicator to warn that Argentina was nearing hyperinflation due to his predecessor’s policies.
Local prices stayed constant while prices for imported products fell 4.1 percent, according to the monthly report. Economy Minister Luis Caputo celebrated the good news on X.
Discounting pandemic data that saw demand plummet, the May print is the lowest in the series, which begins in 2016, Caputo wrote.
In May, monthly consumer price increases also cooled to their slowest pace in five years to 1.5 percent. Milei’s commitments to austerity and a stable peso have helped anchor inflation, which has historically been Argentines’ biggest concern.
Argentina will vote in midterm elections in October, where Milei stands to significantly increase his standing in Congress after bringing inflation and poverty measures to multi-year lows while posting economic growth this year.
by Manuela Tobias, Bloomberg
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