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Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Argentina Latin America

Argentina’s June Inflation Set to Dip Below 2% for First Time

By · July 14, 2026 · 6 min read

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Argentina

Key Facts

May 2026 CPI. Official data showed consumer prices rose 2.1% month-on-month, the lowest in eight months.

June Forecast. BBVA Research and the central bank’s market survey project June inflation at 2.0% or slightly below.

Annual Context. Annual inflation has collapsed from 211.4% in 2023 to a projected 30% in 2026, the lowest in nine years.

Policy Anchor. A crawling-peg exchange-rate band and strict fiscal balance are the twin pillars forcing down prices.

Market Access. The World Bank approved a USD 2 billion package on 16 June to support reforms and restore commercial financing.

Argentina June inflation is expected to print at or just below 2% month-on-month, marking a decisive psychological break into low single digits and reinforcing the credibility of President Javier Milei’s unorthodox stabilisation experiment for global investors.

Argentina's June Inflation Seen Dipping Below 2% for the First Time — Argentina June inflation
Argentina's June Inflation Seen Dipping Below 2% for the First Time (Photo internet reproduction)
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The Data Point That Markets Are Watching

Argentina’s official statistics agency, INDEC, reported that consumer prices rose 2.1% in May 2026, the slowest monthly pace in eight months and a sharp deceleration from the hyperinflationary spiral that gripped the country in late 2023. Analysts now expect the June reading, due in mid-July, to breach the symbolic 2% threshold for the first time since Milei took office, with BBVA Research explicitly forecasting a 2.0% print and the central bank’s own Market Expectations Survey (REM) pointing to 1.8%.

This would not be the first time Argentina has touched sub-2% territory; the country recorded 1.5% monthly inflation in May 2025 and 1.6% in June 2025. Yet the current moment feels different because it arrives under a new monetary framework launched on 2 January 2026, designed explicitly to lock in low single-digit inflation through a crawling-peg exchange-rate band and strict control of the money supply.

From Hyperinflation to a Narrow Path of Disinflation

To grasp the significance of a sub-2% print, one must recall the starting point. In December 2023, the consumer price index jumped 25.5% in a single month, the highest reading since INDEC began publishing the current series in 2016, pushing annual inflation above 211% for the year.

Milei’s shock therapy, built on aggressive fiscal consolidation and a sustained reduction in energy subsidies, has since engineered one of the fastest disinflations in modern Latin American history. By 2025, annual inflation had tumbled to 31.5%, and a Reuters poll projects the 2026 figure will settle at 30.0%, the lowest annual rate in nine years.

The World Bank notes that monthly inflation has fallen from over 20% to around 2.5–3% since the programme began, while the Peterson Institute for International Economics confirms that the new exchange-rate anchor pushed price rises into low single digits, “where it has so far remained.”

The Policy Machinery Behind Argentina June Inflation

The architecture forcing inflation lower is deliberately austere. Since 2024, Argentina has sustained a primary fiscal balance, a feat the US Chamber of Commerce calls the country’s first surplus in over a decade, achieved by halting the central bank’s monetisation of government deficits.

On the monetary side, the central bank introduced a managed float within an exchange-rate band in April 2025, initially set at 1,000 to 1,400 pesos per US dollar, and later tightened the framework in January 2026. BNP Paribas observes that the peso now trades near the lower end of its band, effectively pegged to inflation, while a Banco de España analysis highlights that the monetary base is not expanding despite reserve accumulation, reinforcing the disinflationary trend.

The REM survey anticipates the TAMAR reference rate for large time deposits dropping from 33.03% in June to 28% by November, signalling a gradual normalisation of real borrowing costs while maintaining positive real rates. This calibrated easing is the reward for hitting sub-2% inflation.

What the Milestone Means for Investors and Market Access

For international investors, a sustained break below 2% monthly inflation is the signal that Argentina can re-enter global capital markets on tolerable terms. The government has already begun cautiously issuing US dollar-denominated bonds for the first time since 2018, and country risk has fallen back under 450 basis points, supporting an S&P upgrade to B- with a stable outlook.

The World Bank and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) endorsed this trajectory on 16 June 2026, approving an innovative financing package to mobilise approximately USD 2 billion in commercial finance. The IMF’s 2026 Article IV Consultation projects growth of about 3.5% this year, driven by strong agricultural and energy exports, including a record USD 8.9 billion in April alone.

Yet the equity market’s recent behaviour reveals lingering caution. In early June, the Merval index fell 2.83% as investors took profits after months of euphoria, a reminder that Argentine assets remain highly sensitive to any whiff of policy reversal or external shock.

Geopolitical Dimensions and the Fragility of the Framework

Argentina’s disinflation is not a purely domestic story. BNP Paribas documents interventions by the US Treasury that helped stabilise the peso in early 2026, embedding the programme within a broader alignment of Washington-based multilateral support and IMF conditionality.

This geopolitical scaffolding matters because the framework remains fragile. The Peterson Institute warns that the new monetary scheme “contains new vulnerabilities” and leaves Argentina on an “unnecessarily narrow” path to price stability. With nearly USD 20 billion in debt repayments due in 2026 and reserves still thin, any political backlash or external shock could rapidly push inflation back above 3–4% per month.

The Two-Speed Economy and What to Watch Next

Beneath the headline figures, Argentina is experiencing what Americas Quarterly describes as a “two-speed economy.” Disinflation and improved macro stability coexist with high living costs, weak retail and manufacturing employment, and lingering social discontent, even as poverty has fallen by more than 20 percentage points from its peak.

The political test for Milei is whether ordinary Argentines begin to feel genuine relief. With annual inflation still around 30% and real wages only slowly recovering, the government will need the sub-2% monthly prints to become routine rather than exceptional to cement public confidence ahead of midterm elections.

For outside investors and expats, the key variable to monitor is the exchange-rate band. Morgan Stanley-linked analysis suggests that credible reserve accumulation may require a 10–15% cheaper peso, implying potential future currency weakening even as consumer price inflation falls. The interplay between a firm peso and falling inflation is the central tension that will define Argentine asset prices through the remainder of 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is Argentina’s June inflation falling below 2% significant?

Crossing below 2% month-on-month represents a psychological milestone that validates the crawling-peg monetary framework introduced in January 2026. It signals to international investors that Argentina has moved decisively out of hyperinflation territory and can sustain low single-digit price rises, which is a precondition for regaining regular access to global capital markets at manageable borrowing costs.

How has Argentina reduced inflation from over 200% to around 30% annually?

The Milei administration applied a shock-therapy programme combining immediate fiscal balance, deep cuts to energy subsidies, and a strict monetary anchor through a managed floating exchange-rate band. By halting the central bank’s printing of money to finance government deficits and controlling the money supply, the government broke the inflationary spiral that had pushed annual price rises above 211% in 2023.

What are the main risks that could reverse Argentina’s disinflation trend?

The stabilisation framework is fragile and depends on maintaining tight fiscal discipline and exchange-rate stability. Key risks include political backlash against austerity, a sudden depletion of central bank reserves, external shocks that weaken the peso, and the nearly USD 20 billion in debt repayments due in 2026 that could strain liquidity if market access narrows unexpectedly.

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