Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Peru's Inflation Stays Tame, Opening The Door To Easier Credit


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) In a year of noisy price shocks across much of Latin America, Peru just posted something rare: quiet inflation. National consumer prices rose 0.04% in September, putting year-to-date inflation at 1.15%.

In Lima, the policy bellwether, prices barely moved-up 0.01%-and the 12-month rate through September settled at 1.36%, comfortably inside the central bank's 1%–3% target.

That calm headline hides a tug-of-war underneath. Services crept up-recreation and culture, restaurants and hotels, and health-signaling steady urban demand.

Offsetting that, housing and utilities, transport, alcohol and tobacco, and communications edged down, helped by cheaper energy and fares.

At the wholesale level, prices fell 0.35% as key inputs such as plastic sacks, construction rebar, and liquefied petroleum gas became cheaper, alongside softer poultry, eggs, and pork.



Fresh food told the opposite story: lemons, tomatoes, onions, avocados, coffee, and several fish products got pricier. And the map matters. Cities like Puerto Maldonado, Puno, Arequipa, and Piura saw slightly stronger monthly gains than the national average.
Peru Eases Rates as Inflation Stays Tame and Credibility Holds
This reflects how local markets and supply routes shape grocery bills. The story behind the story is policy credibility and restraint.

With inflation expectations anchored near the middle of the target band and price pressures scattered rather than broad-based, Peru's central bank trimmed its policy rate by a quarter point to 4.25% in September after months on hold.

That is a cautious vote of confidence: credit should become gradually cheaper without betting the farm on a rapid boom. Why this matters beyond Peru: low, predictable inflation stabilizes real wages, steadies regional supply chains, and keeps an important Andean economy from exporting volatility.

For Peruvian families, it means the supermarket shock is milder-even if produce can still swing week to week. For businesses from construction to logistics, cheaper inputs and a gentler interest-rate path make planning possible again.

The risk to watch is external: if global fuel or food prices jump, this delicate balance could wobble. For now, Peru enters the final quarter of 2025 with inflation under control and room to breathe.

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