Argentina’s central bank will likely keep its key interest rate unchanged despite inflation reaching its highest in more than three decades because policymakers expect slowing price pressures later in the year, two officials with direct knowledge of the matter said.
(Bloomberg) — Argentina’s central bank will likely keep its key interest rate unchanged despite inflation reaching its highest in more than three decades because policymakers expect slowing price pressures later in the year, two officials with direct knowledge of the matter said.
Central bank policymakers plan to hold the benchmark Leliq rate at the current 118% level during a board meeting on Thursday, according to the people, who asked not to be named to discuss upcoming policy decisions. Annual inflation jumped again to 124% in August, according to data published by the country on Wednesday.
The officials expect Argentina’s monthly inflation rate to remain above 10% in September after hitting 12.4% in last month, before slowing to single-digit territory in October, one of the people said.
A central bank spokesman said the agency doesn’t comment in advance on rate decisions.
Read More: G-20’s Fastest Inflation Rate Forecast to Roar Past 120%
Already one of the world’s fastest inflation rates, Argentina’s problem with out-of-control price increases is only worsening after the government devalued the officially currency by 18% in August, a day after an unexpected primary election result that saw outsider libertarian economist Javier Milei take first place. Businesses in Buenos Aires and beyond hiked prices overnight after the currency plunge, fueling concerns about a return to the hyperinflation suffered in late 1980s and early 1990s.
August’s 12.4% monthly increase is the fastest since February 1991, and was even higher than the 11.5% median estimate by economists in a Bloomberg survey.
What Bloomberg Economics Says
“A slide in the official and unofficial exchange rates for Argentina’s peso drove a sharp increase in domestic prices in August, and will likely weigh on inflation in September.”
— Adriana Dupita, Latin America economist
— Click here for the full report
The outlook ahead is equally worrying, with economists polled by the central bank saying annual inflation will reach almost 170% by the end of the year, while gross domestic product will contract 3%, according to a monthly survey also published Wednesday.
The International Monetary Fund has asked Argentina to maintain its rate positive in real terms, which strip out inflation, as part of the country’s $44 billion agreement, leading BCRA, as the central bank is known, to last raise rates in August together with the currency devaluation.
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Price increases in August, double the monthly pace seen in July, confirms the rapid pass-through that a currency devaluation has on products in Argentina, explaining at the same time why the government has tried to avoid such measure for years.
Galloping inflation has in addition helped fuel Milei’s political ascent, challenging the candidate for the ruling Peronist coalition — Economy Minister Sergio Massa — which placed third in the primary last month. Massa recently announced a slew of drastic measures to lure more voters, such as eliminating income taxes for all but the top 1% of the population and giving government employees a raise, even if this is likely to fuel inflation further.
The real interest rate still remains positive despite August data because it incorporates expected inflation, senior economy ministry official Gabriel Rubinstein told Bloomberg News in a separate telephone interview. Monthly inflation could return to single digits in October, he said, echoing the central bank officials.
Argentines will cast their ballots in the general election on Oct. 22, which could be followed by a runoff vote between the top two candidates on Nov. 19, and a new government will be inaugurated in December.
(Updates with central bank survey figures in seventh paragraph, political context in 10th paragraph.)
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