Argentina annual inflation hits 138pc ahead of election

13 Oct 2023
Argentina annual inflation hits 138pc ahead of election

A sign with exchange currency values of the unofficial so-called "Blue Dollar" of the parallel market is displayed in the window of a store in Buenos Aires on October 10, 2023. — AFP pic

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Friday, 13 Oct 2023 9:02 AM MYT

BUENOS AIRES, Oct 13 — Annual inflation in Argentina rose to 138 per cent in September, official figures showed yesterday, as economic woes mount ahead of a pivotal presidential election.

Argentines are already struggling to make ends meet, with about 40 per cent of the population living in poverty as the Latin American giant reels from the latest in a long line of economic crises.

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Prices rose 12.7 per cent in September alone, according to the country’s statistics institute.

The news came just days after Argentina’s beleaguered peso tumbled to new lows against the dollar on the informal market as citizens scramble to ditch the peso amid anxiety over what the election will bring.

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Argentina’s traditional political parties have been rocked by the emergence of outsider Javier Milei, a surprise frontrunner in the presidential election.

His libertarian ideas and plans to slash a bloated state and ditch the peso for the US dollar have wooed voters across the board who are desperate for a way out of decades of economic chaos.

President Alberto Fernandez on Wednesday said he had filed a complaint against Milei, accused of sparking a run on the peso by claiming it “isn’t worth excrement.”

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Milei’s main rivals in the October 22 vote will be former security minister Patricia Bullrich on the right, and incumbent Economy Minister Sergio Massa from the ruling centre-left coalition.

Massa has also been accused of worsening Argentina’s crisis by going on a spending spree to lure voters — further fueling inflation, a chronic problem in the country.

In recent weeks he has eliminated income tax for some 800,000 citizens, removed VAT levies from basic goods, and is making cash payouts to millions of informal workers.

Analysts say whoever wins the election faces an uphill battle to achieve what no previous government could: restoring fiscal discipline in the heavily indebted country, where millions rely on welfare, and which has a penchant for printing money to finance its overspending. — AFP

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