Experts Forecast Inflation Spike, Higher Rates After Colombia's 2026 Minimum Wage Decree

One week after President Gustavo Petro decreed a 23% minimum wage increase for 2026—setting it at 1,750,905 pesos based on ILO 'minimum vital' standards for a three-person family—experts warn of inflation exceeding 6%, interest rates rising to 11-12%, and price hikes across sectors, potentially eroding informal workers' purchasing power.

The decree, announced December 30 amid stalled concertation talks targeting 7-16% hikes, bypassed traditional legal factors like inflation, productivity, and GDP per Law 278 of 1996. Aimed partly at boosting popularity ahead of elections, it impacts ~2.5 million formal minimum-wage jobs, 3 million up to 1.5x MW, and ~11 million lower-income workers, totaling ~8.5 million affected.

Economic projections have shifted sharply. Visión Davivienda's Andrés Langebaek upped 2026 inflation to 7.2% from 4.4%, deeming the hike 'disproportionate' and noting losses for informals. Banco de Bogotá anticipates >6% inflation, possibly 7%, from service and regulated good pressures, lifting the 9.25% policy rate to 11.25-12%. Banco de la República's 2025 caution limited cuts to 25bps.

Sectors like agriculture, manufacturing, health, and hospitality—with 1-2% margins and labor >60% of costs—face pass-through price increases exceeding 2025 inflation. Central bank hikes may follow, while agents adjust swiftly.

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President Gustavo Petro signs minimum wage decree amid supportive protests in Plaza Bolívar, Bogotá.
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Petro signs new decree maintaining $2 million minimum wage amid protests

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Following the Council of State's suspension of the 2026 minimum wage decree, President Gustavo Petro signed a new measure on February 19 from Plaza Bolívar in Bogotá, keeping the wage at $2 million (including transport subsidy) despite the ruling. The signing came amid protests defending the 23%+ increase, as the government pushes for a 'vital wage' by 2027.

Following the Council of State's suspension of the original decree, the Colombian government issued Decree 0159 on February 19, 2026, provisionally setting the 2026 minimum wage at $1,750,905—a 23% increase from 2025—plus a $249,095 transport subsidy, totaling nearly $2 million. The measure affects 2.4 million workers (impacting ~10 million people) and awaits a final Council ruling.

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President Gustavo Petro issued Transitory Decree 0159 on February 19, 2026, keeping the minimum wage at $1,750,905, a 23% increase from 2025. This measure responds to an order from the Council of State while it decides on the original decree. The government defends the figure for integrating economic and constitutional criteria, though business groups express concerns over employment and inflation.

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