Argentina’s private-sector workers now earn real wages at their highest level since 2017, marking a pivotal shift after a 16% decline between 2017 and 2023.
President Javier Milei’s aggressive reforms—including slashing public spending by 30%, abolishing currency controls, and deregulating markets—have stabilized inflation from 272% in 2023 to 117.8% in 2024, with monthly rates dropping to 2.2% by January 2025.

The IMF projects 5.5% GDP growth in 2025, fueled by rebounding consumption and investment. Milei’s elimination of the “cepo cambiario” currency clamp unified exchange rates, narrowing the gap between official and parallel dollars from 200% under the previous government to 3%.
This reform, paired with a $20 billion IMF agreement, enabled Argentina to introduce a managed float system in April 2025, stabilizing the peso within a band of 1,000–1,400 per dollar. Central Bank reserves are expected to double to $8 billion by 2026.
Formal private-sector wages now range between €1,200 and €1,300 monthly, though informal workers—40% of the workforce—saw incomes drop 22% in early 2025.
Argentina’s Private Sector Wages Reach Highest Level Since 2017, Driven by Real Gains. (Photo Internet reproduction)
Argentina’s Economic Recovery
Poverty rates initially spiked to 53% post-reforms but fell to 38% by March 2025 as inflation eased. The fiscal deficit turned to a surplus for the first time since 2010, with public spending cuts equivalent to 15% of GDP.
Sectoral growth diverges: construction and manufacturing expanded 11% and 3.4% quarterly in late 2024, while agriculture and mining drove export rebounds.
Critics highlight lingering inequality, with the Gini coefficient hitting a 20-year high. Yet business confidence grows—J.P. Morgan notes a “V-shaped” recovery, with 9.9% annualized Q4 2024 growth.
Milei’s approval remains at 58%, the highest for any Argentine leader 15 months into office since 2003. Challenges persist: sustaining austerity during 2025 elections, normalizing forex markets, and managing inflation’s stickiness amid regulated price adjustments.
For now, Argentina’s mercantile revival—built on fiscal discipline and market liberalization—offers a blueprint for post-crisis recovery, albeit with uneven gains.
GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings