Source: Original elaboration with data from Reuters (June 2025). Published by FinGuru. This article does not represent a specific financial recommendation.
💥 Is Argentina really getting started? Growth, inflation, and what you could
do with your money
By FinGuru · June 30, 2025
🧾 Introduction
This June brought us good news: the Argentine economy grew by 5.8%
year-on-year in the first quarter, the highest level since 2022 (reuters.com). At
the same time, May's inflation was only 1.5%, the lowest in five years,
and it is projected to close the year around 28% (reuters.com). Can we talk about
real recovery? What does all this mean for your personal finances? We'll
tell you.
1. 📈 Rising Growth: The economy driving the wheel
• GDP grew by 5.8% year-on-year and 0.8% quarterly.
• Private consumption rose by 11.6%, while exports
set a record with +7.2% (reuters.com).
• Key drivers: agriculture, energy, sectors linked to agriculture, and
commodities.
How does this affect you? Rising consumption can generate better opportunities
for jobs, increased sales for entrepreneurs, and more economic activity in your
area.
2. 📉 Low Inflation: Relief for your pocket
• May was the month with the lowest inflation in years: 1.5% monthly and 43.5%
annually (reuters.com).
• Analysts project that the annual rate will close between 28% and 29% in
2025 (reuters.com).
What does this mean in real terms?
• Your savings won't evaporate so quickly.
• Investments or fixed terms make sense again.
• There is a bit more predictability in the air.
3. 💰 Does this really impact you?
Situation Opportunity or Risk
Entrepreneur or
SME Better consumption = more sales. Watch out for credit and investment.
Registered
Employee Possibility of real increase vs. lower inflation.
Informal investor You can use fixed terms or funds with better real returns.
UVA/DEVs
Savings tools adjusted for inflation (UVA, bonds)
gain relevance.
FinGuru advice: take advantage of this moment to review your investments and evaluate
local and safe alternatives.
4. 🧭 What vulnerabilities remain?
• The public sector is still in austerity: salary cuts and less
investment.
• The labor market remains battered, unemployment and informality persist.
• BCRA reserves have not yet recovered: monitor future key
monetary measures.
✅ Conclusion
Argentina shows clear signs of recovery: solid growth and lower
inflation, creating an ideal situation to plan, invest, or undertake with
strategy. But the economic base is still delicate: one must act with
intelligence, leaving nothing to chance.
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