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Argentina's monthly inflation falls to 1.9% in June 2026, first sub-2% print under Milei

Argentina's INDEC reported a 1.9% month-on-month consumer price increase in June 2026, down from 2.1% in May and matching market expectations, a milestone in President Javier Milei's shock-therapy stabilisation programme that has cut monthly inflation from over 25% in late 2023

الديون·المال· easing أموال من·التحوّل الصامت ·4 قراءات ·
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انقسام التغطية

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Brazil

Rio Times Online

“Argentina's monthly inflation is expected to print at or below 2% in June 2026, a milestone in Javier Milei's shock-therapy stabilisation programme.”

Brazil-based English-language Latin America outlet; framed the June print as a "milestone" in Milei's stabilisation programme, the first sub-2% result, and placed it in the context of ongoing shock-therapy reformsاقرأ النص الأصلي ↗

Global

IndexBox

“Argentina's CPI increased 1.9% in June 2026, with a 16.8% accumulation in the first half and 33.5% year-on-year.”

Data-analytics outlet; provided the most granular breakdown of the INDEC report, including year-on-year (33.5%), first-half accumulation (16.8%), core inflation (1.6%), seasonal prices (3.4%), and regional variation (Northeast at 36.5% year-on-year)اقرأ النص الأصلي ↗

Global

TradingView News

“Argentina's consumer price index rose 1.9% month-over-month in June 2026, easing from 2.1% in the previous month and matching market expectations.”

Financial-markets data platform; published the INDEC data as a market-relevant event, noting that seasonal prices driven by airfares, hotels, and package holidays partially offset the core disinflation, framing the result as matching market expectationsاقرأ النص الأصلي ↗

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Summary

Argentina's national statistics agency INDEC reported a 1.9% month-on-month consumer price increase in June 2026, down from 2.1% in May. It was the first time monthly inflation has come in below 2% since President Javier Milei began his shock-therapy stabilisation programme in December 2023. Year-on-year inflation stood at 33.5%, with 16.8% accumulated in the first half of the year. Core inflation was lower than the headline at 1.6%, meaning underlying price pressure has eased faster. Seasonal prices, driven by tourism services, airfares, hotels, and package holidays, rose 3.4% and prevented the headline from falling further. Milei's programme, including deep fiscal cuts, currency liberalisation, and deregulation, has reduced monthly inflation from above 25% in late 2023 to below 2%, but annual inflation at 33.5% remains high in global terms. Argentina 's Northeast region saw the highest annual rate at 36.5%, reflecting uneven disinflation across the country.

The split

Brazilian and regional Latin American coverage (Rio Times Online) led with the political milestone framing. Data-focused outlets (IndexBox, TradingView) provided the breakdown without political commentary. No Argentine-government official statement appeared in the crawl feed alongside the data release. The sub-2% threshold has symbolic importance in Argentine public discourse that domestic coverage would normally emphasise heavily, but only regional English-language sources framed it as a milestone.

By the numbers

  • 1.9%, Argentina monthly CPI, June 2026 (vs. 2.1% in May)
  • 1.6%, core inflation, June 2026 (below headline)
  • 33.5%, year-on-year inflation, June 2026
  • 16.8%, first-half 2026 CPI accumulation
  • 3.4%, seasonal price increase in June (tourism, airfares, hotels)
  • 36.5%, highest regional annual rate (Northeast Argentina)

Why it matters

Sub-2% monthly inflation was inconceivable in Argentina two years ago. The Milei administration's shock programme produced the fastest disinflation the country has seen in decades, at a cost of severe recession and social spending cuts that hit Argentina's lower-income population hardest. The June data suggests the stabilisation is durable rather than a temporary statistical artefact, which matters for Argentina 's market credibility and its ongoing IMF programme. If the monthly rate stays below 2% through the second half of 2026, annualised inflation will fall below 25% by year-end, which would be Argentina's lowest annual rate since 2017.

What to watch

  • Whether monthly CPI stays below 2% in July, which would confirm the June print as a trend rather than a one-month dip.
  • The exchange rate trajectory: peso stability has been central to the disinflation; any depreciation episode would quickly feed into prices.
  • Social indicators alongside the inflation data, including unemployment and wage growth, which determine whether the disinflation is translating into real purchasing power recovery.
  • IMF review of Argentina's programme, for which the June CPI data is a key performance metric.
Argentina monthly CPI change, % month-on-month (%)
1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 2025-01 2026-06 2025-05 2025-10 2026-02 1.9
source: INDEC (Argentina's national statistics agency)
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