Argentine industry operates at lowest level since March

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.

Argentina's industry is facing a deep crisis, with capacity utilization (UCI) falling to 57.7% in November 2025, a drop of nearly five points from 62.3% in November 2024. This is the lowest level since March 2025 and confirms a recessive plateau instead of the expected rebound. While oil refining reaches 86.5% driven by Vaca Muerta exports, labor-intensive sectors like metalworking (39.9%, excluding automotive) and automotive (46.3%) are sinking due to lower local demand and imported competition.

Economist Mariano Kestelboim described the situation as "a combo of economic policies that harm the industry greatly," citing compressed internal consumption, trade openness, exchange rate lag, and high credit costs. These are "the lowest records in national history" outside the pandemic, he said.

The textile sector is the hardest hit, operating at 29.2% capacity compared to 48.2% the previous year, leaving seven out of ten machines idle. Marco Meloni, a textile entrepreneur involved in spinning and fabric finishing, warned that the fundamental problem is "recreating internal demand," as wages do not cover basic expenses. The sector lost at least 18,000 formal jobs and up to 28,000 informal ones, with over 400 companies closed. "You start suspending people and then laying them off," Meloni recounted, comparing it to the early 2000s crisis with zero inflation, zero deficit, and 25% unemployment.

Business owners warn they are burning margins to survive, with clothing prices rising only 15% year-over-year against 31% inflation. Openness to Chinese imports, online sales without tariffs, and tax pressure worsen unfair competition. Meloni emphasized: "First-world countries are industrialized nations" and advocated exporting value-added products instead of raw materials.

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Realistic image of a Colombian factory with workers and growth statistics highlighting 1.9% manufacturing production rise.
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Colombia's manufacturing production grows 1.9% in October

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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.

The National Institute of Statistics and Censuses (INDEC) reported that the utilization of installed capacity in the manufacturing industry reached 61.0% in October 2025. This marks a decline of 2 percentage points from the same month in 2024 and 0.1 points from September. The textile sector saw the largest year-over-year drop.

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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.

Production costs in Colombia's industry fell 2.63% at the end of 2025 compared to 2024, according to the Producer Price Index (IPP) report from Dane. The Ministry of Hacienda highlighted this drop as a sign of relief for inflation, driven by moderation in external raw material prices and imported goods. The mining and quarrying sector led with a -19.91% decline.

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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.

Colombia's National Administrative Department of Statistics (DANE) reported that the unemployment rate for 2025 was 8.9%, the lowest since 2001. This figure marks a 1.3 percentage point decrease from 2024. In December 2025, the rate fell to 8%, with employed population rising by 603,000 people.

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Marco Lavagna's resignation as INDEC director has sparked a crisis in Argentina's statistics agency, with accusations of data manipulation to support Javier Milei's government narrative. Analysts draw parallels to Kirchnerist practices, as the administration attempts damage control and plans a new inflation index for August 2026.

 

 

 

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