
Argentina’s Core Inflation Dips Below 2% as Nigeria, Indonesia Grapple with Price Pressures
A cross-continental snapshot of May inflation data reveals Argentina’s milestone disinflation, Nigeria’s mixed trajectory, and sectoral strains in Indonesia and Saudi Arabia.
Argentina’s consumer price index rose 2.1% in May, marking the second consecutive monthly deceleration, but the figure that ignited official celebration was the core inflation rate — which strips out volatile regulated and seasonal prices — slipping to 1.9%, its first time below 2% in eight months. Economy Minister Luis Caputo hailed both readings as the lowest since September, and private consultancies in Buenos Aires quickly revised June forecasts downward, with several now projecting a headline print beneath the symbolic 2% threshold. The moderation was driven by contained increases in utility tariffs and transport costs, alongside relative stability in food prices, though beef showed some upward pressure. For a government staking its credibility on taming one of the world’s highest inflation rates, the core number offered a rare vindication.
Viewed from Lagos, however, the inflation story carries a different complexion. Nigeria’s headline rate climbed to 15.93% in May, a six-month high and a 0.24 percentage point increase from April, as food staples such as maize, onions, and tomatoes continued to drive prices upward. Yet beneath the annual figure, the month-on-month pace slowed to 1.75% from 2.13%, suggesting that while the cost-of-living squeeze persists, the intensity of price increases is moderating. Analysts in Abuja note that the deceleration in monthly momentum, if sustained, could signal a turning point, but the heavy weight of food in the Nigerian basket leaves the outlook vulnerable to agricultural supply shocks and distribution bottlenecks.
Elsewhere, inflation remains comparatively subdued but far from uniform. Indonesia recorded a modest 0.28% monthly rise in May, translating to 3.08% year-on-year, with the statistics bureau pointing to non-subsidised fuel, airfares, and cooking oil as the primary culprits. Officials in Jakarta observed that inflationary pressure during the Eid al-Adha period historically runs lower than during Eid al-Fitr, tempering expectations for a seasonal spike. Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, posted a 1.8% annual increase, driven largely by a 3.7% rise in housing, water, and electricity costs, alongside a striking 20% jump in jewellery and watch prices that pushed the personal care category up 5.6%. These figures underscore how even in a low-inflation environment, specific sectors can generate acute price pressures that ripple through household budgets.
Looking ahead, Argentine analysts caution that the path to sustained single-digit annual inflation remains narrow. The June deceleration is expected to benefit from seasonal factors and state subsidies, but looming adjustments to electricity and gas tariffs, fuel prices, and the managed exchange rate from July could reignite price momentum. In Nigeria, the trajectory hinges on agricultural output and the naira’s stability, while Indonesia and Saudi Arabia face idiosyncratic risks from energy subsidy reforms and global commodity swings. Across these disparate economies, the May data illustrate a broader truth: disinflation is rarely linear, and the final mile often proves the hardest.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
Argentina's core inflation fell below 2% for the first time in eight months, a figure that both the government and private analysts see as validating the economic plan. Projections for June suggest further deceleration, with some estimates already placing the monthly rate under 2%.
Nigeria's headline inflation rose to 15.93% in May, a six-month high, driven by surging prices of maize, onions, tomatoes and other staples. The increase reverses the earlier downward trend, raising concerns about food affordability.
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