Colombia's January inflation hit 5.35%

Colombia's National Administrative Department of Statistics (Dane) reported that annual inflation for January 2026 stood at 5.35%, up 13 basis points from January 2025. Driven by lodging services, restaurants, and food, the figure slightly exceeded market expectations. This data will guide the Central Bank's monetary policy decisions.

The Dane released inflation data for January 2026, showing an annual consumer price index (CPI) variation of 5.35%, up from 5.22% in January 2025. The monthly variation was 1.18%, the highest for any January since 2023's 1.78%.

Key drivers included lodging with a 1.42 percentage point contribution, restaurants and hotels at 1.01 pps, and food at 0.96 pps. Sectors like education rose 7.36%, and transportation 5.79%, due to seasonal school fees and public transit fares.

Andrea Ramírez Pisco, Dane's deputy director, stated: “Meals outside the home like ‘corrientazos’, foods such as dairy and beef, pork, and chicken meats, and urban transport contributed 81 basis points to January's figure. Fruits also tend to rise from November to January. In contrast, imported legumes like lentils moderate this subcategory; however, the increase in bean prices ultimately pushed the CPI higher”.

By city, Pereira topped at 6.17%, followed by Bucaramanga (5.91%) and Manizales (5.63%). The lowest were Santa Marta (3.50%), Valledupar (3.86%), and Pasto (4.20%). Bucaramanga saw the highest monthly variation at 1.87%, driven by restaurant meals (0.48 pps) and urban transport (0.40 pps).

César Pabón, director of Economic Research at Corficolombiana, noted: “January's inflation rose due to higher food prices, many affected by the economic emergency like liquors, and services showing early effects of the minimum wage. The impact will be stronger in February and March”.

The figure fell short of the 5.4% average forecast from 25 analysts in the Citi survey. The Central Bank recently hiked its intervention rate by 100 basis points to 10.25%, amid unanchored inflation expectations and a 23% minimum wage increase. The Roasted Chicken Index averaged $41,576, down from December, hinting at food inflation slowdown, though restaurant costs pressure services.

Labaran da ke da alaƙa

Illustration showing Colombia's February 2026 inflation at 5.29%, with easing trend chart, food and education price symbols, and Central Bank target.
Hoton da AI ya samar

Colombia's inflation eases to 5.29% in February 2026

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI Hoton da AI ya samar

The National Administrative Department of Statistics (Dane) reported that Colombia's annual inflation for February 2026 was 5.29%, a slight slowdown from January's 5.35%. The monthly Consumer Price Index (CPI) variation stood at 1.08%, driven by rises in education and food. This figure remains above the Central Bank's target range of 3%.

Dane reported that Colombia's annual inflation for March 2026 reached 5.56%, up from 5.29% in February. This is the highest rate since September 2024 at 5.81%. Year-to-date inflation for the first quarter stood at 3.07%.

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI

Colombia's January inflation hit 1.18% monthly, exceeding historical averages and highlighting the broad impact of the minimum wage increase on the IPC basket. The services component drove the uptick, with an annual variation of 6.33%. This breaks two months of moderation, pushing annual inflation to 5.35%.

South Africa's consumer price index averaged 3.2% in 2025, down from 4.4% the previous year, staying within the Reserve Bank's target range. Inflation rose slightly to 3.6% in December, but economists remain optimistic due to factors like fuel price reductions and a stronger rand. The overall trend signals progress in managing price pressures.

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI

DANE reported a 10.9% unemployment rate for January 2026, the lowest in recent history for a first month of the year, despite a 23% minimum wage increase. Informality dropped to 55%, and the employed population grew by 324,000 people. Yet, these official figures are sparking political polarization.

Egypt’s annual urban headline inflation accelerated to 13.4% in February 2026, up from 11.9% in January, driven by seasonal rises in food and non-food prices. Food inflation reached 4.6%, while non-food inflation climbed to 19.3%.

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI

In January 2026, Colombia's unemployment rate stood at 10.9%, the lowest for any January since 2001, with 324,000 more workers than in the same month of 2025. The number of unemployed people fell by 186,000 to 2.8 million. This improvement was driven by growth in self-employment and people leaving the labor force.

 

 

 

Wannan shafin yana amfani da cookies

Muna amfani da cookies don nazari don inganta shafin mu. Karanta manufar sirri mu don ƙarin bayani.
Ƙi