Soaring Prices... Argentina Raises Benchmark Interest Rate from 52% to 60%
[Asia Economy Reporter Kim Hyunjung] Bloomberg reported that the Central Bank of Argentina raised its benchmark interest rate by 8 percentage points from 52% to 60% on the 28th (local time).
The monetary authority announced in a statement that the benchmark interest rate would be raised to 60%, resulting in an effective annual rate of 79.8% when compound interest is considered. This rate hike marks the seventh consecutive increase and is the largest since August 2019.
With the annual inflation rate expected to reach 70%, investors have been demanding a more stringent tightening monetary policy. Consumer prices rose even faster earlier this month following the resignation of Finance Minister Martin Guzman and growing doubts about the International Monetary Fund (IMF)'s $44 billion bailout program.
Despite continuous rate hikes amid the ongoing economic crisis, Argentina recorded an annual inflation rate of 64% in June. There are forecasts that a triple-digit inflation rate by the end of the year may be unavoidable.
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Economist Jose Yache, who served as Deputy Minister of Economy under former President Carlos Menem, told Argentine media outlet El Cronista, "The inflation rate for July is expected to exceed 7%, and by August, it could already surpass 100% annually before the end of the year."
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