Indexation and minimum wage reignite January inflation

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%.

January's inflation data shows the minimum wage hike creating widespread effects on prices. At 1.18% monthly, this marks the fourth highest January figure since 2010 and 1.4 times the 2010-2025 historical average. Annually, the rate rose from 5.10% to 5.35%, with 71% of IPC items showing positive variations.

Services were the key driver, posting 1.18% monthly—the second highest for January in 15 years—and lifting annual inflation to 6.33%, the peak since April 2025. Items like eating out, rents, domestic services, and condo fees, which rely heavily on labor, account for much of the pressure. Services excluding rents varied 1.89% monthly, also the second highest in the period.

Minimum wage-sensitive items contributed 59% to the total IPC variation. Moreover, about 60% of the IPC's weight is indexed to past inflation, minimum wage, or both, amplifying and extending the impact. Food rose 1.66% monthly, led by perishables such as meats, tomatoes, potatoes, and milk, with an annual rate of 5.11%.

Regulated items increased 1.34% monthly, due to rises in urban transport and fuels, offset somewhat by lower electricity and water rates, reaching 5.47% annually. Goods saw 0.46% monthly, pushing annual to 2.90%, driven by alcoholic beverages, pharmaceuticals, and cleaning products, despite an 11% peso appreciation.

Core inflation measures indicate persistence: excluding food, 5.41%; excluding food and regulated, 5.39%, the highest since September 2024. In the region, Colombia had the sharpest rebound, unlike Chile's decline and mild rises in Brazil, Mexico, and Peru.

February forecasts suggest 1.22% monthly and 5.4% annual, with services at 7.02%. Meanwhile, the provisional suspension of the 23.78% wage increase decree adds institutional uncertainty, though January data already shows price adjustments. The discussion focuses on indexation and its role in inflation persistence.

Связанные статьи

President Gustavo Petro signs decree for Colombia's 23% minimum wage hike to 2 million pesos in 2026, as workers celebrate and businesses express concerns.
Изображение, созданное ИИ

Colombia Decrees 23% Minimum Wage Increase for 2026 After Intense Negotiations

Сообщено ИИ Изображение, созданное ИИ

Following stalled talks where unions demanded a 16% rise and businesses warned of economic risks, President Gustavo Petro decreed on December 30 a 23% increase in Colombia's 2026 minimum wage, to 1,750,905 pesos plus 24.5% higher transportation aid of 249,095 pesos, totaling 2 million pesos monthly. The hike benefits 2.4 million formal workers and aims for an ILO 'vital wage,' but prompts debate on inflation, SME impacts, and competitiveness.

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.

Сообщено ИИ

Following projections of around 5.2% for year-end 2025, Colombia's National Administrative Department of Statistics (Dane) reported actual annual inflation of 5.1% for December 2025, down 10 basis points from December 2024. This below-expectation figure underscores persistent pressures in housing, services, and food amid minimum wage hikes, as the central bank eyes interest rate moves.

The Autonomous Fiscal Rule Committee (Carf) warns that the recent 23% minimum wage hike to $2 million—decreed on December 30—could cost $5.3 trillion in 2026 (0.3% of GDP), complicating fiscal sustainability. Labor Minister Antonio Sanguino announced plans to desindex key goods from the wage and provide SME relief to curb inflation.

Сообщено ИИ

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.

Following President Petro's announcement and Labor Minister Antonio Sanguino's confirmation of the 2026 minimum wage decree—due December 29-30 and introducing the 'vital wage' concept—the Central Unitaria de Trabajadores (CUT) demands a 16% rise, while industry leaders caution against inflating living costs amid over 5% inflation.

Сообщено ИИ

The Central Bank of Egypt has outlined factors behind moderated inflation in January 2026, with annual urban headline inflation falling to 11.9% from 12.3% in December 2025, driven mainly by non-food inflation dropping to 18.6%, its lowest since October 2023. Food inflation rose temporarily to 1.9% from 1.5%. Nationwide headline inflation eased slightly to 10.1% from 10.3%.

 

 

 

Этот сайт использует куки

Мы используем куки для анализа, чтобы улучшить наш сайт. Прочитайте нашу политику конфиденциальности для дополнительной информации.
Отклонить