Overview
- Economy minister Guillermo Acosta presented the 2026 plan on Nov. 14 highlighting reductions to Urban Property Tax and selective cuts to Gross Income rates, with scant focus on public works.
- Acosta quantified the fiscal cost of the tax relief at about 600 million dollars for the province.
- Opposition blocs responded with restraint, dropping last year’s “impuestazo” line that followed the 2024 budget filing.
- The provincial government points to near-term signals from the private sector, with visits scheduled for Mercado Libre to announce an investment creating 440 jobs in Villa María and Río Cuarto and Aeropuerto 2.000 to detail funds for expanding Córdoba’s airport.
- Officials expect the six deputies aligned with Llaryora to back President Milei’s budget in extraordinary sessions in December, a step they say could improve market conditions and reopen external financing for priority infrastructure.