Protesters and police clashed outside Argentina’s Congress on Wednesday as senators discussed a controversial reform package that proposes to privatize several state entities in a move critics have branded neoliberal.
Hooded protesters threw rocks and firebombs at officers in Buenos Aires, while police used batons and tear gas. According to broadcaster TN, several cars went up in flames and about twenty suspects were arrested.
The office of Argentina’s far-right, libertarian president Javier Milei congratulated the security forces in a post on
During the congress, senators discussed a reform package proposed by Milei’s government that includes the privatization of several state-owned enterprises, tax breaks for major investors, and labor market and tax reforms.
The left-wing opposition and social movements have denounced the package as neoliberal and unfair, and the government has had to significantly curtail its proposals to gain support in parliament.
Argentina has been plagued by a serious economic crisis for years. Annual inflation recently skyrocketed to nearly 290%, one of the highest levels in the world.
Milei’s government recently cut thousands of public sector jobs, cut subsidies and ended social programs, sparking demonstrations.
Critics say Milei’s harsh austerity program is pushing many people into poverty and endangering the country’s future.
According to the Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina, about 56% of people in the once-prosperous country live below the poverty line.
South America’s second-largest economy suffers from a bloated state apparatus, low industrial productivity and a large shadow economy that deprives the state of much tax revenue.