Argentina's economy contracted by an annual 2.1pc in February, the sharpest decline since September 2024 following a trend of largely steady growth.
The contraction followed growth of 1.7pc in January, according to preliminary data from the national statistics institute (Indec) released Wednesday. The economy grew by 3.3pc in December last year but contracted by an annual 0.2pc in November last year following 13 months of growth.
The data in February was pulled lower by a 8.7pc contraction in manufacturing, a 7pc decline in retail and wholesale trade and a 6pc drop in utilities. Partially offsetting the weakness were a 14.8pc increase in fishing, a 9.9pc gain in mining output and 8.4pc growth in agriculture.
The February decline is only the second monthly contraction since November 2024, but reflects a steady erosion in recent months and comes on top of troubling inflation data for March.
Inflation reached 3.4pc in March, the highest monthly rate in the past 12 months, Indec reported on 14 April. The annualized rate was 32.6pc in March, well above the 10.1pc for the year forecast in the government's 2026 budget. Inflation has been increasing since falling to a monthly low of 1.5pc in May 2025.
A bright spot, however, is trade. Exports were up 30.1pc in March, according to Indec on 20 April, marking a trade surplus of $2.5bn compared with a surplus of $623mn a year earlier.

