Four in ten Argentines seek second job to make ends meet

A report from consultancy firm Delfos shows that 43% of surveyed Argentines are seeking a second job because their current income does not cover basic expenses. The phenomenon mainly affects those aged 16 to 49 and also retirees. The national survey, conducted from April 10 to 14, 2026, on 3,120 cases, underscores economic vulnerability in the country.

The Delfos report states that four in ten Argentines are seeking a second job to cover basic needs, with 43% of respondents saying their current income is insufficient. Only 20% do not need additional work, while the rest are out of the labor market or focused on other activities.

Retirees, pensioners, and those withdrawn represent 14% of those seeking extra income, ranking third behind independent trades (28%) and private employees (15%). Other groups include teachers (8%), provincial public employees (7%), and professionals (6%). 77% of those affected are aged 16 to 49.

Geographically, Greater Buenos Aires accounts for 20% of cases, followed by NEA (19%) and NOA (17%). Buenos Aires province contributes 14%, Córdoba 9%, and CABA 6%.

"The problem is not only access to employment, but its capacity to cover basic needs, consolidating a complex scenario to escape economic vulnerability," the Delfos analysis concludes.

In February 2026, average salaries rose 2.4% monthly, below February's 2.9% inflation, per INDEC. They have accumulated 5% yearly against 5.9% inflation.

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Illustration depicting Argentina's February economic decline with falling graphs, closed factories, and empty shops in Buenos Aires.
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Economic activity fell 2.6% in February, according to INDEC

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Argentina's monthly economic activity estimator (EMAE) recorded a 2.1% year-over-year drop and a 2.6% seasonally adjusted decline in February 2026, INDEC reported. Manufacturing industry contracted 8.7% and commerce 7.0% year-over-year.

Grupo Cibest warned of high labor informality and vulnerable self-employment in Colombia, despite job creation recovery. Dane data showed an unemployment rate of 8.8% in March. The report highlights challenges including 55.6% informality and wage growth without productivity gains.

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Argentina's Northeast (NEA) recorded 4.1% inflation in March, the highest in the country per INDEC data, exceeding the national 3.4%. The region has accumulated 11.5% this year, driven by food, services, and utilities. This widens the regional gap with areas like Patagonia at just 2.5%.

Deputies from Unión por la Patria launched the Family Vulnerability Index of Congress to track the economic crisis's impact on Argentine households. Based on December 2025 data, it scored 4.9 points, signaling a concerning vulnerability zone. It examines delinquency rates, employment, business closures, and real wages.

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The Unión Docentes Argentinos (UDA) rejected the government's economic proposal in the national teacher bargaining talks, deeming the minimum salary floor of $650,000 for March and $700,000 for April insufficient. Negotiations were adjourned until April 8. The union claims the amounts fail to cover basic needs amid inflation.

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