Sales drop in textile and supermarket sectors in January

Argentina's textile sector and supermarkets reported a significant sales drop in January, blamed on economic factors like inflation and high costs. Guillermo Fasano, president of the Mar del Plata Textile Chamber, and Fernando Savore, a Buenos Aires supermarkets representative, highlighted weakened consumption despite summer seasonality. Both warned of the impact on workers' pockets and the need for reforms.

In January 2024, Argentina's textile industry faced a critical period, with a very significant nationwide sales drop, including Mar del Plata during the peak summer season. Guillermo Fasano, president of the Mar del Plata Textile Chamber, told Canal E that while the month showed mixed signals and the final outcome was better than expected, the sector is navigating an adverse scenario. “As a textile sector, we are going through a stage of very important sales drop,” Fasano stated, noting that tourist influx and weather favored those who adapted with affordable prices and extended hours. “Those who prepared to work with good prices and a lot of hourly attention were satisfied with the result,” he added.

On high clothing prices, Fasano blamed the unbalanced exchange rate: “Argentina is expensive or the dollar is cheap,” he said, criticizing ignorant comparisons on qualities and the impact of past import bans that raised product costs. Regarding the labor reform under debate, he called it positive for SMEs for providing legal security and reducing litigation, but stressed non-salary labor costs: “For every 1,600,000 pesos we put into a salary, the worker receives only 1,000,000,” with an additional 40% at supermarkets.

Meanwhile, in Buenos Aires supermarkets, Fernando Savore described January as a “quite quiet” sales month, deepened by the economic context beyond seasonality. “Historically, January and February are months when many families take days off and there is less consumption,” he noted. He reported 2.5% increases in dairy, around 3% in packaged foods, and 5-6% in cleaning and perfumery, driven by operational costs like energy and taxes. “It changed a lot the operational cost of the business when we see what they charge us now for electricity and municipal, provincial, and national taxes,” Savore explained, who questioned INDEC's inflation measurements for not analyzing segments precisely and underestimating e-commerce growth, including online food sales. “Today everything is in online format and e-commerce has grown tremendously,” he added. He concluded: “We continue weakening the worker's pocket,” warning of 5% cumulative rises in 60 days.

Both leaders agreed on cautious consumption, with shoppers comparing more and prioritizing essentials, amid stagnant wages and inflationary pressures.

Relaterte artikler

Realistic image of a Colombian factory with workers and growth statistics highlighting 1.9% manufacturing production rise.
Bilde generert av AI

Colombia's manufacturing production grows 1.9% in October

Rapportert av AI Bilde generert av AI

Colombia's National Administrative Department of Statistics (Dane) reported that manufacturing production rose 1.9% in October 2025 compared to October 2024. Manufacturing sales grew 2.4%, and employed personnel increased 0.7%. Bruce Mac Master, president of Andi, highlighted sectoral heterogeneity and the importance of the year's final months.

Argentina's industrial capacity utilization dropped to 57.7% in November 2025, the lowest since March, according to INDEC data. The textile sector plummeted to a historic 29.2%, with business owners warning of mass closures and job losses due to trade openness and lack of internal demand.

Rapportert av AI

Argentina's industrial production dropped 6.1% in November compared to the same month in 2024, according to preliminary data from the Latin American Economic Research Foundation (FIEL), marking the fifth consecutive decline since July. While it posted a slight monthly increase of 0.4%, the sector has accumulated a 0.5% contraction over the first eleven months of the year. This outcome occurs amid an industrial recession that began in February, worsened by a shorter working month.

Argentina's agroexport sector commended the progress made in 2025 under President Javier Milei's government, highlighting macroeconomic stabilization, predictability in exchange rates and inflation, and reductions in grain export duties. Gustavo Idígoras, head of CIARA and CEC, foresaw a more stable policy for 2026 benefiting agriculture. These steps produced positive signs amid a year of intense changes.

Rapportert av AI

A report shows that while 2025 inflation closed at 31.4%, more than half of Córdoba households cannot cover the basic food basket, and nearly 90% must go into debt to eat. The drop in consumption and income deterioration push thousands of families into a 'daily default'. This reopens the debate on poverty measurement in the province.

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.

Rapportert av AI

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.

 

 

 

Dette nettstedet bruker informasjonskapsler

Vi bruker informasjonskapsler for analyse for å forbedre nettstedet vårt. Les vår personvernerklæring for mer informasjon.
Avvis