Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
The Argentine economy continues to decline, with GDP falling for five consecutive quarters.
{Current column}5446People have watched
IntroductionArgentina's economic recession has further deepened, with data from the National Institute of S ...
Argentina's economic recession has further deepened,Ranking of domestic foreign exchange trading platforms with data from the National Institute of Statistics and Census (INDEC) showing that the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) fell by 1.7% quarter-on-quarter in the second quarter of 2023 and also by 1.7% year-on-year, exceeding analysts' expected decline of 1.4%. This marks the fifth consecutive quarter of year-on-year GDP decline and the third consecutive quarter of quarter-on-quarter decline, illustrating the depth of the recession.
Despite the overall economic contraction, the agriculture and fishing sectors performed remarkably well, with agriculture growing by 81.2% year-on-year and fishing by 41.3%. However, these gains were not enough to offset the weak performance in other sectors, with construction plunging by 22.2%, manufacturing shrinking by 17.4%, and retail falling by 15.7%, further dragging down the overall economy.
Meanwhile, the persistent sluggishness in consumption and private investment has also exerted pressure on the economy. Although Argentina has somewhat alleviated external pressures by reducing imports and increasing exports, the financial services, real estate, and hospitality sectors have all witnessed significant contractions.
Argentina entered into a technical recession earlier this year, with the economy projected to contract by 1.6% for the entire year of 2023. The newly appointed President Javier Milei has implemented stringent austerity measures aimed at controlling soaring inflation, rebuilding foreign exchange reserves, and reducing the fiscal deficit. While these measures have significantly hindered economic activity and increased poverty and unemployment rates, the government deems them necessary steps to address Argentina's ongoing economic crisis.
Despite the current high monthly inflation rate, the Milei government's proposed 2025 budget draft forecasts a sharp drop in next year's inflation rate to around 18%, with GDP growth expected to reach 5% in both 2025 and 2026. The Argentine market has reacted positively to the "zero deficit" budget proposal, although market performance dipped slightly before the Federal Reserve announced a 50 basis point rate cut on Wednesday.
Risk Warning and DisclaimerThe market carries risks, and investment should be cautious. This article does not constitute personal investment advice and has not taken into account individual users' specific investment goals, financial situations, or needs. Users should consider whether any opinions, viewpoints, or conclusions in this article are suitable for their particular circumstances. Investing based on this is at one's own responsibility.
Tags:
Related articles
Oil rises as US stockpiles may drop, demand signs stay strong By Reuters
{Current column}By Stephanie Kelly and Trixie YapSINGAPORE (Reuters) -Oil prices rose on Tuesday on expectations tha ...
Read moreEuro Low, Recession Fears, Citi Warns on Oil
{Current column}© Reuters By Geoffrey Smith -- Freedom from British tyranny, maybe. But freedom from the fear o ...
Read moreOil: Possible Global Recession And Its Effect On Demand Is Key
{Current column}The WTI and Brent benchmarks fell below the $100 mark in trading on July 6 and 7 after significant d ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- Asia FX flat as Fed minutes loom, kiwi slides on dovish RBNZ By
- Japan's KDDI shares slide nearly 4% after giant mobile network outage By Reuters
- Elon Musk plans to 'significantly' increase childcare benefits at his firms By Reuters
- Dow Futures Down 155 Pts; Growth Fears Weigh on Sentiment By
- Debt ceiling deal, Fed rate path, Erdogan's victory
- U.S. Stocks Bounce as Investors Take in Fed's Rate Outlook By
Latest articles
-
Wood: Software stocks next to benefit from AI boom after Nvidia By
-
Dollar Edges Lower; RBA Hikes Interest Rate By
-
OPEC's Barkindo dies at 63, Nigerian oil official says By Reuters
-
Video shows Ohio officers killed unarmed Black man in hail of bullets By Reuters
-
Jobless claims, Apple earnings, Shell earnings: 3 things to watch By
-
Nervous staff and no bankers: Western firms struggle to exit Russia By Reuters