Argonne Central Bank Survey: The inflation rate is expected to be 180.7% by the end of 2023
因醉鞭名马幌
发表于 2023-10-13 21:13:17
309
0
0
According to the survey results of the Argentine Central Bank, economists expect Argentina's inflation rate to be 180.7% by the end of 2023; It is expected that the GDP in 2023 will shrink by 2.8% compared to the previous year.
CandyLake.com is an information publishing platform and only provides information storage space services.
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author only, this article does not represent the position of CandyLake.com, and does not constitute advice, please treat with caution.
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author only, this article does not represent the position of CandyLake.com, and does not constitute advice, please treat with caution.
You may like
- The latest revelation confirms that the Bank of Japan is not in a hurry to raise interest rates in October, as the yen exchange rate falls to a critical level
- The Bank of Canada's' big move '! Cutting interest rates by 50 basis points heralds a new phase of monetary easing
- Chairman of Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group: Bank of Japan interest rates may hit 1% by March 2026
- Interest rate hike is approaching! The Bank of Japan has just issued a heavy signal!
- European Central Bank Management Committee: There are sufficient reasons to cut interest rates in December, and future policies may shift towards stimulus
- Four interest rate cuts are not a dream! Bank of England Governor reveals interest rate path plan for next year
- The unknown is the most dangerous! The market is becoming increasingly confused about whether the Bank of Japan will raise interest rates next week or not
- The Bank of Japan maintains policy interest rates unchanged! Bitcoin once fell below $100000
- Putin just admitted that inflation is a concern, but the Russian central bank unexpectedly stopped raising interest rates
- Foreign investors are selling! The Bank of Korea's intervention to 'rescue the market' will further cut interest rates