The Argentinian government statistics agency says the official poverty rate in Argentina jumped to 52.9% during the first six months of Javier Milei’s presidency
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Argentina's poverty rate jumped from 41.7% to 52.9% during the first six months of Javier Milei' s presidency, the statistics agency reported Thursday, a rise reflects the pain of the country's most intense austerity program in recent memory.
The government's finding that another 5.2 million people had so far slipped into poverty during Milei's short tenure marks a setback for the far-right economist even as foreign investors and the International Monetary Fund — to which Argentina owes $43 billion — cheer his fiscal shock therapy.
Bracing for negative news hours before the poverty report's release, Milei's spokesperson sought to deflect the blow in a lengthy press conference.
“The government inherited a disastrous situation,” Manuel Adorni told reporters, lambasting the decades of unbridled spending under Milei's left-leaning Peronist predecessors. “They left us on the brink of being a country with essentially all of its inhabitants poor.”
Inflation, now running at more than 230% annually — among the worst in the world — played a key role in pushing the half-year poverty rate to the highest level since the country’s 2003 financial crisis.
Unlike previous governments that kept consumer spending high at the cost of a massive budget deficit that brought the country infamy for defaulting on its debts, Milei dismantled price controls, cut subsidies on energy and transport and devalued the peso by 54% in December after taking office. The austerity measures and deregulation have marked a brutal contraction in spending power and dragged the
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