Peru: Economy grows at softest pace since Q1 2024 in the second quarter
GDP reading: According to a preliminary reading, GDP growth lost steam in Q2, falling to 2.8% year on year from 3.9% in the first quarter and marking the worst reading since Q1 2024. That said, the Q2 reading was above the Latin American average for the sixth straight quarter.
Drivers: The downturn was broad-based, with private consumption, public spending, fixed investment and exports all weakening.
Private consumption increased 3.6% in the second quarter, which was below the first quarter’s 3.8% expansion. Government consumption growth moderated to 3.6% in Q2 (Q1: +4.8% yoy). Fixed investment growth softened to 7.7% in Q2, compared to 9.3% recorded in the previous quarter. Exports of goods and services fell 0.6% on an annual basis in the second quarter, which contrasted the first quarter’s 9.2% expansion. In addition, imports of goods and services growth moderated to 12.7% in Q2 (Q1: +17.1% yoy).
Panelist insight: On the latest reading and outlook, Itaú Unibanco analysts said:
“Economic activity continues to perform well. Business confidence indicators remain broadly positive, the investment recovery is ongoing, and terms of trade are still near historical highs. We have a GDP growth forecast of 2.9% for 2025 and 2.7% for 2026. While tariff-related uncertainty presents medium-term downside risks, the slightly improved growth outlook for China and the exemption of refined copper exports to the U.S. will help mitigate short-term risks to Peru’s economic activity.”