OECD Expects Argentina to Grow More than Other G20 Nations
10 Articles
10 Articles
OECD expects Argentina to grow more than other G20 nations
According to the biannual Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development's (OECD) 2025 Economic Outlook published Tuesday, Argentina is projected to experience significant economic growth of 5.2% in 2025 and 4.3% in 2026, the highest among Latin American G20 countries and second only to India globally.
The organism recalculated these variables, although it maintains that the economy will have a "robust" increase.
PARIS.- In its semi-annual outlook report released on Tuesday, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) cut its forecast of economic growth in Argentina for this year, from 5.7 per cent that it had estimated in March to 5.2 per cent today, and stressed that “a strong economic recovery is under way”, although “there are major challenges ahead.” In addition, the agency projects that Argentina’s GDP will grow 4.3 per cent in…
The economist Ricardo Arriazu, one of the most listened to by the businessmen and respected by President Javier Milei, warned that Argentina “is going to be an expensive country, as it was in the golden era. That is going to cause bankruptcy and creation.” And he stressed that there will be a complicated transition for some companies, so he suggested that the country should advance in “a model of general equilibrium, analyzing where the bottlene…
International organization identifies labor informality as the main obstacle and proposes a road map with key reforms. The OECD launched a challenge to Peru: overcoming 3% of economic growth is within reach if the structural burdens that slow down its potential are attacked. Paula Garda, head of the organization’s Peru-Colombia team, revealed that the key is to reduce the alarming employment informality of 70% through educational and tax reforms…
The Argentine economy is passing through a moment of apparent calm: inflation slows down, the Central Bank maintains its commitment to zero emission and the government celebrates the first signs of macroeconomic order. However, in the street and in households, the sensation is another. Wage —the most tangible thermometer of daily well-being — continues [...] The post Low inflation and wage pause: the new Argentine dilemma appeared first on punto…
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