Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Mexico’S Inflation Nears Central Bank Threshold Amid Persistent Price Pressures


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Mexico's inflation rate climbed to 3.93% annually in April, marking its third consecutive monthly increase and edging closer to the central bank's 4% upper tolerance limit, according to data from the National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI).

The monthly Consumer Price Index rose 0.33%, driven by sharp increases in food and service costs, while energy subsidies provided partial relief.

Core inflation, excluding volatile items like energy and agricultural goods, accelerated to 3.93% annually-its highest in eight months-reflecting entrenched domestic price pressures.

Food staples such as tomatoes (+22.08%) and avocados (+10.90%) saw significant spikes, while regulated electricity tariffs fell 12.16% in 18 cities. Services inflation remained elevated at 4.56%, underscoring wage-driven cost increases.

The Producer Price Index posted a 0.14% monthly rise but continued its annual descent to 6.87%, signaling easing upstream costs. Intermediate goods rose 6.67% yearly, while final goods increased 6.95%, highlighting uneven sectoral pressures.



The Bank of Mexico (Banxico ) faces a policy balancing act after cutting interest rates by 50 basis points in March to 9%, its lowest since 2022. Analysts expect Banxico to maintain gradual rate cuts amid stable inflation, though U.S. trade tensions and slowing GDP growth complicate the outlook.

Citi projects 2025 inflation at 3.8%, with economic expansion barely reaching 0.1% this year. Persistent food costs and service-sector inflation suggest monetary policy will remain cautious, prioritizing price stability over growth stimuli.

April's data reinforces challenges for households and businesses as staple goods outpace wage growth. While energy subsidies temper overall inflation, structural pressures in agriculture and services keep Banxico's 3% target distant.

The central bank's next rate decision on May 15 will test its resolve to navigate mounting global trade uncertainties and domestic economic fragility.

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The Rio Times

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