Argentine consumption closes 2025 with modest 1.3% growth

Argentina's domestic consumption ended 2025 with a slight 1.3% uptick during the Christmas holidays, according to Salvador Femenia, CAME's Press Secretary. Yet, formal employment has lost over 240,000 jobs since Milei's government began, with ongoing challenges in reserves and exchange stability. Experts like Roberto Rojas emphasize the need to accumulate dollars to meet 2026 debt maturities.

The close of 2025 brought mixed signals for Argentina's economy. Salvador Femenia, in an interview with Canal E, explained that year-end sales showed a 1.3% increase compared to 2024, though he described this rebound as “quite discreet and austere.” The average ticket stayed nearly the same, with lower-value purchases but in greater quantity, driven by credit card use amid indebted families and tight limits. “90% of merchants made a great effort with discounts and offers,” Femenia highlighted.

In the labor sector, the year was critical: “In Milei's government so far, more than 240,000 jobs have been lost, at least formally.” Femenia stressed the importance of promoting registered employment to benefit workers and the pension system. Compared to 2024, consumption accumulated a 3.4% gain up to November, on a base of prior deep declines.

Looking to 2026, uncertainties linger due to restrictive monetary measures and political doubts, though the government has strengthened its position in Congress. Femenia emphasized the need for private investment: “Argentina needs private investment to recover activity, and the context must be created.”

Meanwhile, economist Roberto Rojas analyzed the new exchange regime that debuted in 2026. The initial rise in the official dollar could be a first-day overreaction, but the key challenge is building reserves: “The true challenge for the Government is to accumulate the necessary dollars for reserves and also to pay capital and interest on external debt.” Net accumulation via foreign trade is around 3,000 million dollars, after subtracting tourism and interests. For the January 9 maturity, the government arrives tight but has a 7,000 million dollar repo negotiated with banks. Rojas warned that monthly inflation will remain between 2% and 3%, still a grave level for the macroeconomy.

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Illustration depicting Argentina's Central Bank president announcing the 2026 reserve accumulation plan, with rising reserve graphs and IMF approval.
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Central bank announces reserve accumulation plan for 2026

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Argentina's Central Bank announced on Monday, December 15, 2025, the first measures of its 2026 economic plan, including updating exchange rate bands according to inflation and a consistent program to accumulate international reserves. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) welcomed these decisions, aligned with its prior recommendations. Meanwhile, the National Treasury purchased 320 million dollars following the announcements.

Former Economy Minister Hernán Lacunza praised improvements in public accounts for 2024 and 2025 but warned that by the end of 2025, the fiscal situation lacks room for additional maneuvers. His analysis shows an official surplus of 0.2% of GDP, though adjustments for interest and inflation reveal larger deficits. Lacunza stressed that the end of the financial normalization process will demand greater savings efforts.

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Argentina is projected to achieve a record in exports by 2026, surpassing $90 billion, driven by agriculture, energy, and mining sectors. This progress would provide relief to the Economy Ministry and Central Bank, which aim to boost reserves. The key challenge is sustaining competitiveness and accessing markets in a more restrictive global environment.

In the first trading session of 2026, Argentina's dollar blue fell to 1,495 pesos (buy) and 1,515 pesos (sell), amid ongoing exchange market liberalization since April 2025. Official dollar at 1,445/1,495; MEP 1,499.30/1,501.80; CCL 1,535.30/1,536.60; crypto 1,524.10/1,541.12; card dollar 1,943.50. Country risk hit 567 basis points.

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Argentina's Central Bank bought US$55 million on January 12, its sixth consecutive daily purchase since January 5 under the 2026 accumulation plan announced in December, bringing the total to US$273 million. Gross reserves climbed to a new Milei-era high of US$44.768 million amid stable exchange rates.

Argentina's country risk, as measured by JP Morgan, closed on Monday, January 26, 2026, at 513 basis points, its lowest level since mid-2018. This 2.5% drop from Friday stems from the Central Bank's reserve accumulation exceeding US$1 billion in January. Markets view these developments as signs of improved financial solvency.

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Chilean economists anticipate a negative or zero variation in the Consumer Price Index (IPC) for December, closing 2025 annual inflation around 3.5% or 3.6%. For the first quarter of 2026, they project convergence below 3%, driven by drops in fuels, food, and electricity. Official data will be released on January 8.

 

 

 

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