Buenos Aires, December 14 (NA) -- The report released by the Congressional Budget Office (OPC) details the total transfers received by the 24 national jurisdictions. The amounts are adjusted for nominal and real value, where it is observed that they remain slightly above inflation.
The OPC report, which had access to the Argentine News Agency, details the total transfers sent by the government of Javier Milei during the third quarter of the year (July-September). The data is divided into automatic transfers (regulated by law), non-automatic (discretionary) and total transfers, with the sum of both routes.
It details the nominal and real interannual variation between 2024 and 2025.
General Data Taking into account the total of the 24 national jurisdictions, the amount rises to more than 50% in nominal terms. Although it remains above the Consumer Price Index (IPC), it represents a moderate real improvement.
Automatic Transfers This type of transfer is governed by law, where the central administration is obliged to distribute a certain amount of the collection of national coparticipable taxes. When measuring the nominal variation, the percentage rises to almost 50%. However, taking into account the inflation indicator, that number slows down to 3.9% interannually.
Non-Automatic Transfers In this section, discretionary transfers represent the largest flow in the coparticipation: with respect to the nominal value, they doubled the shipments compared to 2024, while measured at the same rate as inflation, they also remained above and won by a wide margin.
This section represents the political decisions that the Government makes when prioritizing provinces over others. The Autonomous City of Buenos Aires (CABA) was the most outstanding when collecting the data, with a real increase of 238.5%: it went from $202,535 million to $841,317 million.
The strong real growth of non-automatic transfers is explained almost exclusively by the compliance with the Court ruling in favor of CABA (which obliges the State to return part of the coparticipation funds), the increase in ATN (National Treasury Contributions) and the launch of the National Literacy Plan, while educational items and general programs are cut.
The Provinces That Received the Most Taking into account the sum between automatic and non-automatic transfers, the province of Buenos Aires is in first place with more than $10 trillion in the third quarter of the year.
Provinces Ranking 1. Buenos Aires: $10,176,703 million (real variation of 4.7%) 2. Santa Fe: $3,794,905 million (real variation of 1.2%) 3. Córdoba: $3,699,167 million (real variation of 1.1%) 4. Chaco: $2,125,341 million 5. Entre Ríos: $2,043,280 million 6. Tucumán: $2,030,546 million 7. CABA: $1,791,825 million 8. Mendoza: $1,741,818 million 9. Santiago del Estero: $1,733,891 million 10. Salta: $1,681,446 million 11. Corrientes: $1,592,506 million 12. Formosa: $1,508,649 million 13. Misiones: $1,416,793 million 14. San Juan: $1,388,442 million 15. Jujuy: $1,187,209 million 16. Catamarca: $1,130,429 million 17. Río Negro: $1,049,885 million 18. San Luis: $930,795 million 19. La Rioja: $857,976 million 20. La Pampa: $784,157 million 21. Neuquén: $769,466 million 22. Chubut: $678,820 million 23. Santa Cruz: $670,421 million 24. Tierra del Fuego: $513,692 million