The Argentine economic reality continues to hit hard those who bet everything on the defeat of Javier Milei's government. In just a few days, the President showcased data that cannot be disputed: mining production grew by 9.5% year-on-year, the CPI in Buenos Aires City fell below 2.1%, and the average salary in dollars is now the highest in Latin America. Each of these figures represents a direct blow to the narrative of "depressed consumption" that the opposition has been repeating for months.
The evidence is also visible on the streets. Shopping malls are full, restaurants are in high demand, and the recovery of various sectors of economic activity reflects a reality that is hard to hide. Meanwhile, those who destroyed purchasing power for years through monetary emission, currency controls, and chronic deficits are now trying to deny what is happening before everyone's eyes. They prefer to cling to worn-out slogans rather than acknowledge that the economic program is beginning to show concrete results.
But the change is not limited to consumption. It is also reflected in the renewed confidence that Argentina is inspiring among investors and producers. Louis Dreyfus Company announced a $400 million investment for a new sunflower processing plant in Bahía Blanca. The Central Bank has reached key reserve targets ahead of schedule. Exports from various sectors are growing at double-digit rates, and productive activity is starting to regain momentum after years of stagnation.
This scenario is complemented by a process of deregulation that is steadily advancing. The elimination of privileges, simplification of procedures, and reduction of bureaucracy are returning time, resources, and freedom to citizens and businesses. The end of regulatory monopolies, the streamlining of logistical processes, and the removal of unnecessary obstacles are clear signs of a paradigm shift. Each reform reduces power spaces for those who have lived off an oversized and inefficient state for decades.
That is why the opposition faces an increasing difficulty. The data systematically contradicts the catastrophic forecasts that dominated much of the public debate over the past year. Inflation continues to decelerate, investments are increasing, exports are growing, and wages are recovering ground. In the face of this reality, many of the government's critics seem more concerned with maintaining a political narrative than with understanding the transformations that are taking place.
The contrast is also observed beyond Argentina's borders. While numerous leaders, entrepreneurs, academics, and investors around the world closely follow the Argentine economic experiment, much of the local leadership remains trapped in repeatedly failed schemes. Argentina is re-emerging as an attractive country for investment, production, and the development of long-term projects. The country's international image is improving because there is a growing perception that, for the first time in many years, there is a clear and consistent economic direction.
This same vision for the future is beginning to extend to the technological challenges of the next decade. The debate over legal status for companies managed by artificial intelligence reflects a profound difference between two ways of understanding progress. While the government seeks to create conditions for innovation to find an appropriate institutional framework, its critics often respond with distrust, preventive regulation, and fear of change. The discussion is not only technological; it is a discussion about what kind of country Argentina wants to be in the coming years.
Every passing day makes it more evident that the supposed "depressed consumption" was never an objective description of the economy. It was a political narrative constructed to anticipate a failure that did not occur. Reality shows something else: more investment, more exports, more reserves, higher salaries in dollars, and an economy that is beginning to leave behind years of decline.
Milei does not need grand speeches to respond to his critics. The results are enough. While the establishment tries to maintain increasingly unconvincing explanations, the facts continue to accumulate in the same direction. And facts, sooner or later, end up prevailing over any narrative.