Societies do not only suffer when a currency loses value. They also change the way they envision their own future. Inflation is not simply a sustained increase in prices: it is a process that deteriorates people's ability to plan, alters everyday incentives, and makes decisions that, under normal conditions, should be routine, more uncertain. That is why, when inflation begins to consistently decline, what starts to recover is not only purchasing power. Something much harder to measure also returns: trust in time.
June data shows a new step in that direction. The Consumer Price Index recorded a monthly variation of 1.9%, the lowest in ten months. Core inflation fell to 1.6%, its lowest level since July of last year. Food prices increased by just 1.3%, while the three-month moving average continued to decrease, reinforcing the trend of disinflation. The evolution of the Basic Food Basket and the Total Basic Basket also confirms a process of widespread deceleration.
The truly relevant issue, however, is not the number itself. Monetary stability restores the capacity of the price system to convey reliable information. And when prices return to fulfilling that function, coordination among millions of individual decisions begins to improve.
From the tradition of the Austrian School, prices are much more than commercial labels: they constitute a system of information. Each price synthesizes dispersed knowledge about preferences, costs, resource availability, and future expectations. As Friedrich Hayek explained, no individual possesses all that information; precisely for that reason, the market can coordinate millions of decisions without the need for central direction.
Inflation introduces noise into that language. When the currency loses stability, it becomes increasingly difficult to distinguish whether a price increases because a good has become relatively scarcer or simply because money has lost purchasing power. That confusion deteriorates economic calculation, increases business errors, and forces individuals and companies to allocate time and resources to protect themselves from inflation instead of producing, innovating, or investing. The entrepreneurial function stops discovering opportunities to create value and shifts to trying to survive in an environment where market signals cease to be reliable. This is one of the reasons why monetary stability occupies a central place in the Austrian tradition regarding market functioning.








