Inflation has become the main concern of a majority of Argentines, leaving aside other issues such as insecurity and poverty according to the latest public opinion polls from Ibarometro and Hugo Haime & Associates, released this week in Buenos Aires and which refers to the second half of April.
According to Ibarometro, 36.9% of respondents consider their main concern "the hike in prices", while for Haime 50% of Argentines feel that "inflation is what most impacts daily life". This suggests a radical change from last January. At the beginning of 2008, for Ibarometro the main issues were insecurity, education, poverty and fourth rated inflation. But in three months inflation climbed to top of the list. Similarly with Haime, the April 50% was only 31% last January. To make things even more worrisome, last January 37% believed inflation in 2008 was to be higher than in 2007, but in the latest poll the percentage jumped to 71%. That is 71% believe the current Argentine administration is not considered capable of keeping prices at a reasonable level. Food, clothing and personal hygiene goods were the most volatile according to the opinion polls. "Inflation, newspaper headlines almost daily and the discredited image of Indec (the office responsible for calculating consumer price indexes) is fueling the negative perception of the economic situation. We also believe that the camp conflict increases that negative perception", pointed out Ibarometro. More specifically compared with January "the inflation issue has jumped 200% from 11% to 36.9%, while insecurity falls ten percentage points. Clearly the increase in prices shadows all other concerns. The education issue also virtually has disappeared from the list of ratings", added Ibarometro. As to the overall economic situation, a majority of Argentines have a negative view: 56.8% describe it as "bad" or "very bad". Only 30% considers it "very good" or "reasonably good". However in spite of these percentages four out of ten respondents considered positive the sacking of the Economy minister Martin Lousteau. The Ibarometro poll questioned 2.500 people by phone from the different regions of Argentina. Haime's poll included 500 personal interviews, adults above 18, residents of Buenos Aires City and the province of Buenos Aires, where almost half of Argentines live. Last week a public opinion poll from Garciela Romer & Associates anticipated the tendency which is now being confirmed: inflation jumped to second place behind insecurity in the list of concerns.
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