Overview
- The ICG’s 4.9% July gain lifted it back to May’s 2.45 reading after oscillating between 2.33 and 2.45 since April
- Perceptions of problem-solving capacity, officials’ honesty, spending efficiency and concern for the public interest all rose, while overall government evaluation slipped by 2.4%
- After 19 months in office, Milei’s average ICG of 2.50 remains above Alberto Fernández’s 2.18 and just below Mauricio Macri’s 2.59 for comparable periods
- Confidence was highest among men, 18–29-year-olds, residents of Argentina’s interior provinces and those with tertiary or university education
- The monthly Torcuato Di Tella and Poliarquía Consultores survey carries a ±0.063 margin of error and is closely watched for its correlation with electoral outcomes