NEA leads March inflation with 4.1% monthly rise

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%.

The National Institute of Statistics and Censuses (INDEC) reported that the NEA, comprising Chaco, Corrientes, Formosa, and Misiones, saw a 4.1% price rise in March. This outpaced the Northwest (4.0%), Cuyo (3.2%), and Patagonia (2.5%), positioning NEA as the most affected region.

Food and non-alcoholic beverages rose 4.5% in the area, with significant impact from meats and derivatives. Regulated services increased 7.4%, driven by utilities, transport, and education, where hikes reached up to 22.7% due to the school year start.

Year-to-date through the first quarter, NEA accumulated 11.5%, above the national 9.4%, with interannual inflation at 33.4% versus 32.6% countrywide. Services climbed 6.1%, outstripping goods at 3.5%, adding pressure on household spending.

The national government attributed part of the rise to external factors like fuels and forecasted a slowdown ahead. Yet, the figures indicate a more intense inflationary dynamic in NEA, where incomes average below the national level.

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Argentine President Javier Milei celebrating falling inflation rates to 2.6% in April
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April inflation falls to 2.6% as Milei hails the data

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The National Institute of Statistics and Censuses reported the consumer price index at 2.6% for April, the lowest reading in ten months.

Economy Minister Luis Caputo projected that March inflation will exceed 3%, driven by oil impacts and educational seasonality. The official INDEC data will be released on Tuesday, April 14, at 4 p.m. Caputo assured that disinflation and economic growth will begin from April.

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Dane reported that Colombia's annual inflation for March 2026 reached 5.56%, up from 5.29% in February. This is the highest rate since September 2024 at 5.81%. Year-to-date inflation for the first quarter stood at 3.07%.

Anif warned that the arrival of the El Niño phenomenon in the second half of the year could push inflation in Colombia close to 7%. The think tank pointed to pressures on food and energy as main factors.

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After a 2.6% drop in economic activity in February, according to INDEC, private consultancies estimate a March recovery driven by agriculture. Equilibra forecasts a 1.5% year-on-year rise and 1% monthly desesasonalized. The first quarter would end with 0.4% growth versus 2025.

Colombia recorded an annual inflation rate of 5.3% in February 2026, ranking second among OECD countries, behind only Turkey at 31.5%. The figure exceeds the OECD average of 3.4%.

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South Korea's consumer prices rose 2.2 percent in March from a year earlier, government data showed Thursday. The increase, exceeding the government's 2 percent inflation target, was mainly driven by a surge in global oil prices due to prolonged Middle East tensions. It marks the steepest rise since December's 2.3 percent, according to the Ministry of Data and Statistics.

 

 

 

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