Petro attributes housing contraction to Banco de la República rates

President Gustavo Petro blamed the Banco de la República's high interest rates for the housing sector's contraction, which has seen 10 consecutive quarters of decline. The leader stated that these positive and growing real rates have prevented users from affording payments. Analysts, however, emphasize the drop in social interest housing as the main factor.

Colombia's GDP growth in 2025 reached 2.6%, 0.2 percentage points below the guilds' expectations of 2.8%. This outcome raised concerns over low levels in industry and investment, especially in the housing sector.

President Gustavo Petro, in a post on his X account, stated that "the housing sector must know that, throughout my Government, the Banco de la República has left real interest rates positive and growing". He added that "the housing sector does not grow as much because its users cannot pay installments with high interest rates", referring to the nominal rate exceeding the inflation level, which contracts growth.

However, analysts provide a different view. Dane director Piedad Urdinola explained that gross fixed capital formation fell 2.9%, with housing bearing the heaviest impact: an annual growth rate of -8.5% and a contribution of -1.8 percentage points. She noted a lower registration of housing at all levels in many cities across the country.

Diego Montañez, an economic analyst at Universidad Eafit, detailed the performance of social interest housing (VIS). From 2018 to 2022, initiations reached an index of 168, a 68% increase from the initial level. In the 2014-2018 period, the index was 107, reflecting 7% growth. In contrast, from 2022 to 2025, the indicator dropped to 58, 42% below the 2018 level. Additionally, the accumulated variation in VIS over the last 12 months to January declined by 27.3%.

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Colombia's Banco de la República raised its intervention rate by 100 basis points to 10.25%—the highest in over a year—in its first 2026 board meeting, citing persistent inflation above 5% for nearly six months and unanchored expectations from a 23.8% minimum wage hike decreed by President Petro's government. The decision, with a split 4-2-1 vote, drew market surprise and government criticism over economic contraction risks.

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Leonardo Villar, general manager of Banco de la República, and Germán Ávila, finance minister, clashed in a political oversight debate on the fiscal impact of recent interest rate hikes. Villar defended the bank's autonomy and criticized government discrediting. Ávila responded by highlighting his guerrilla past and questioning Colombia's rate increases compared to other countries.

President Gustavo Petro explained on his X account that economic reactivation funds will not come from the national budget, but from new taxes. This comes amid Decree 0150 of 2026, declaring an economic, social, and ecological emergency in eight northern Colombian departments due to the climate crisis.

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The National Administrative Department of Statistics (Dane) revealed that the Economic Tracking Indicator (ISE) grew 3.1% in November 2025 compared to the same month in 2024, marking 18 consecutive months of positive growth. However, the manufacturing sector showed limited progress with 0.7% production growth, while sales fell 0.4%, and retail commerce rose 7.5%. Overall industrial production varied by 1.7%, driven by electricity supply.

 

 

 

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