US Inflation Expected to Accelerate in Jun. Due to Tariffs
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Argentina inflation ticked up slightly and less than expected in June, another win for President Javier Milei ahead of midterm elections after a large seasonal component pulled May’s reading down to a five-year low.
In Javier Milei's Argentina, falling inflation has stimulated a boom in car and real estate sales and foreign-bound planes take off laden with tourists.
US government to file amicus brief supporting halt against Preska ruling during appeal process; Trump administration shows support for Milei government.
Argentina’s economy is rebounding fast. Inflation has plummeted, growth is back, and poverty is falling. Javier Milei’s shock reforms are delivering what few thought possible.
Argentina's National Institute of Statistics and Census (Indec) reported on Monday that inflation in June was 1.6%, marking the second-lowest monthly figure of the year. This brings the cumulative inflation for the first six months of 2025 to 15.
President’s economic team sends a signal to the market that it still has an iron grip on Argentina’s money supply, a key ingredient to thwarting inflation, stabilising the peso – and his high approval ratings.
With his chainsaw economics, Milei is jolting Argentina back to life. The economy grew at its fastest clip in nearly 20 years, defying predictions of total collapse.
President Javier Milei, who has slashed public spending by 30% since taking office in 2023, vowed to veto the legislation.
Monthly inflation in Argentina inched slightly higher in June, but remained among the lowest in years, a boost to budget-slashing President Javier Milei's efforts to curb runaway prices.
The current state of Argentina’s economy is a far cry from what “experts” predicted when they warned that President Javier
Inflation last month only slightly up at 1.6%, barely up on last month; Consumer prices rose 15.1% in the first half of the year, up almost 40% over the last 12 months, INDEC reveals.