


Even as the annual rate declines, prices remain high. For now, stability matters more than speed.
Week after week, the same scene plays out in thousands of households: a familiar grocery list, a higher bill than a few years ago. The sense that money doesn’t stretch as far is not just a feeling. It reflects a broader economic reality that, while technical in definition, shapes everyday life in tangible ways: inflation.
Inflation tracks the overall rise in the prices of goods and services. In Colombia, the official measure comes from the National Administrative Department of Statistics through the Consumer Price Index. Recent data show annual inflation has come down from the double-digit levels seen in 2022 and 2023, now hovering around 5 percent.
That marks a meaningful drop from recent peaks, but it still sits above the central bank’s 3 % target. In practical terms, prices are still rising, just not as quickly as before.
A common misconception is that when inflation declines, prices return to earlier levels. They do not. Slower inflation means prices keep increasing, only at a reduced pace, and remain at the higher levels already reached.
That is why, despite a downward trend in the annual rate, groceries, rent and utilities continue to weigh on monthly budgets. Many rental contracts, for instance, are adjusted based on the previous year’s inflation, extending the pressure on households even as the overall trend softens.
The central bank has signaled in its policy decisions and reports that inflation is expected to keep easing gradually toward the 3 % target. That outlook matters not just for the number itself, but for what it signals in terms of confidence and planning.

Beyond the headline figure, one factor has an outsized impact on people’s financial lives: stability. When prices move sharply or unpredictably, households tend to delay purchases, cut back spending and act with caution.
When there is a clear and sustained downward path, planning becomes more feasible. Predictability allows households and businesses to make decisions about saving, investing and spending with less uncertainty.
A regional comparison helps illustrate the point. In Panama, inflation has been among the lowest in Latin America in recent years. Official figures and estimates from the International Monetary Fund show year-on-year variations near zero, and even negative in some recent periods, with rates around -0.2 % at the end of 2024 and -0.7 % in May 2025.
At the same time, IMF projections place economic growth between roughly 4 and 5 % of GDP. That combination of stable prices and steady growth makes planning easier for both households and firms.
In Colombia, the task is not only to bring inflation down further, but to keep it there. The recent period of sharp increases has left a lasting imprint on public perception.
Questions about how much rent will rise next year, whether groceries will cost more next month, or whether it is better to spend now or wait, still shape everyday decisions.
Official figures point to an improvement from the most critical phase, but full relief depends on inflation settling near the target and staying there. That scenario does not mean lower prices than today, but a more predictable environment.
In economics, stability rarely makes headlines. But it quietly reshapes daily life. When households can anticipate what it will cost to live next month or next year, budgeting stops being a constant race against rising prices and becomes, once again, a tool for planning.

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