
Argentina’s June inflation expected to break below 2% for first time in ten months
Private estimates and the Buenos Aires city index point to a third straight monthly slowdown, even as the peso weakened 5% and country risk fell to a seven-year low.
Argentina’s monthly inflation is poised to fall below 2% in June for the first time since August 2025, according to government officials and a tight cluster of private forecasts. The national statistics agency INDEC will publish the official consumer price index on Tuesday 14 July, with projections from consultancies ranging from 1.8% to 2.1%. The median of the central bank’s market survey (REM) stands at 2%, while the City of Buenos Aires’s own index, often a leading indicator, already printed at 1.8%. A reading below the 2.1% recorded in May would mark a third consecutive month of deceleration and push the accumulated inflation for the first half of 2026 to around 16%.
The moderation has been driven chiefly by a sharp slowdown in food and beverage prices. Weekly supermarket surveys by LCG registered near-zero variations for six straight weeks through late June, a pattern not seen since mid-2025. Analytica and Econviews both reported that the four-week moving average for food and drinks had dropped to between 1.1% and 1.5%, with increases in vegetables and some processed items offset by declines in meat and fruit. Regulated prices also contributed less to the headline figure: electricity tariffs rose only 1.5% for the third month running, while gas and water adjustments were contained at 3%. The disinflation occurred despite a 5% depreciation of the peso against the US dollar during June, which pushed the exchange rate above 1,500 pesos for the first time since early 2026.
Government officials have publicly aligned with the optimistic end of the forecast range. Presidential spokesman Adrián Ravier cited a 1.9% estimate, while Economy Minister Luis Caputo said the administration is working to ensure “inflation will keep falling.” In parallel, sovereign risk, as measured by the JP Morgan EMBI spread, closed at 402 basis points on Friday, its lowest since April 2018, and officials expect it to breach the 400-point floor. The rally in Argentine assets has been supported by the disinflation trend and a new financial programme, though analysts in Buenos Aires caution that the second half of the year brings seasonal pressures from winter tourism and a thinner supply of foreign exchange.
Elsewhere, inflation dynamics are moving in opposite directions. India’s retail inflation accelerated to 4.38% in June, breaching the Reserve Bank of India’s 4% medium-term target for the first time in five months, driven by a rise in food prices. Indonesia’s interior minister urged regional governments to strengthen price controls after year-on-year inflation reached 3.34%, close to the upper bound of the government’s target band. For Argentina, the immediate focus is on the INDEC release and whether the official figure confirms the sub-2% print. The next test will come in July, when winter holiday spending, fuel-price decisions by state-controlled YPF, and the passthrough of the June currency move will determine if the disinflation path can be sustained.
| Latin American press | +0.70 | aligned |
|---|---|---|
| Indian & South Asian press | −0.30 | critical |
| Southeast Asian press | 0.00 | neutral |
Argentina's government and market analysts celebrate the imminent sub-2% inflation as a vindication of President Milei's economic reforms. The narrative is one of triumph over crisis, with the state as the active agent of recovery.
The frame gains plausibility by personifying the state—attributing the inflation drop directly to the president and minister's policies—and by citing private consultancy forecasts as independent validation, creating a self-reinforcing optimism.
The bloc omits the contrasting rise in India's inflation, which would suggest that Argentina's success is an isolated case rather than a global trend, potentially undermining the triumphal narrative.
India's statistical authority reports the inflation breach as a matter-of-fact development, but the framing subtly elevates it to a monetary policy concern by highlighting the gradual rise and the target miss.
The frame gains plausibility by establishing a hierarchy of threats: the inflation rate is compared to the RBI target and to previous months' data, creating a narrative of a creeping problem that demands attention, without overt alarm.
The bloc omits Argentina's successful inflation drop, which would provide a contrasting example of effective disinflation, potentially reducing the sense of urgency around India's rise.
Indonesia's interior ministry speaks as a coordinating authority, framing inflation control as a routine administrative task that requires local government cooperation to stay within a predefined target.
The frame gains plausibility by universalizing the problem: inflation is presented as a technical challenge that can be managed through standard procedures and inter-governmental coordination, rather than a crisis or a triumph.
The bloc omits both Argentina's success and India's rise, which would introduce comparative perspectives that could either undermine the sense of routine (if Argentina's success is seen as exceptional) or heighten urgency (if India's rise is seen as a warning).
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