Argentina’s battered middle class shrinking under Milei

Author: AFP

Argentina’s middle class is vanishing: with austerity cuts introduced by self-proclaimed “anarcho-capitalist” President Javier Milei, ever more people cannot afford schooling or medicine, even those holding down two jobs.

Inheriting massive levels of inflation and government debt, Milei has since taking office in December slashed subsidies for transport, fuel and energy, even as annual inflation soared to over 270 percent and wage-earners lost a fifth of their purchasing power. While the poor are, as always, hardest hit by economic turmoil, in Argentina they’re not alone.

“For a long time I considered myself middle class… Today, I feel like I belong to the lower class, or even poor,” said Agustina Bovi, a 30-year-old cook at a trendy vegan restaurant in Buenos Aires. She also works a second job at night, as a kitchen assistant. But two incomes are not enough to get her to the end of the month.

“It’s the best job I’ve ever had, and yet it’s my worst period from an economic point of view,” she told AFP. To make matters worse, the restaurant’s clientele has plummeted, and her salary with it, as people spend less money on dining out. “I changed my brand of toothpaste, deodorant. One just goes to the supermarket and looks for the cheapest… In the last three months I stopped going to the gym, going out, anything that is leisure.” Today, almost six out of 10 Argentines are poor, according to figures from the Pontifical Catholic University’s Social Debt Observatory — a significant jump from 49 percent measured when Milei took office.

Economic ‘tsunami’

“A tsunami came and destroyed the lives that we lived ‘normally’ until December. A 180-degree change,” said Samanta Gomez, a 39-year-old nurse who has had to transfer her three children from a private school to a public one, as fees increased and the family income shrunk. Public schools are poorly regarded in Argentina, and avoided by anyone who can afford private fees.

But in recent months, “we’ve seen a very big transfer of middle-class children from private to public,” said Sonia Alesso, leader of the CTERA teachers union. Gomez and her husband both lost their jobs at a time when Milei, in his efforts to right the economy, has carried out “shock therapy,” including by devaluing the peso by 50 percent, further fueling inflation.

Both now work odd jobs where they can find them. The family of five left their home to move in with Gomez’s grandmother, sharing two beds between six people as the government lifted rent caps in a country where an average household now spends half its income on lodging. Then in February, Gomez had a stroke, putting further pressure on the already thinning family purse.

“I think my head collapsed because of the financial worries, the health of the children, the school and the day-to-day,” she sobbed. Before, she added, with a monthly income of about $460, “you made ends meet, you could buy your children what they wanted and needed.”

‘Not a homogenous class’

The decline of Argentina’s middle class, once an example of upward social mobility that was envied in much of Latin America, predates Milei, who rode into office on a wave of fury over decades of economic crisis in the country. Over the past 50 years, a series of neoliberal governments have overseen deindustrialization and high public debt, according to historian Ezequiel Adamovsky.

There was a more prosperous interval under the interventionist policies of leftists Nestor and Cristina Kirchner, who successively led the country from 2003 to 2015, only to be replaced by conservative Mauricio Macri.

In 2012, the World Bank said Argentina’s middle class had doubled over a decade to reach 18.6 million people, or 43 percent of the population.

Share
Leave a Comment

Recent Posts

  • World

Turkiye’s Erdogan calls for Islamic alliance against Israel

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday Islamic countries should form an alliance against what…

5 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Gold extraction endangers rare reptiles

A rare snake species known as the blunt-nosed viper and other reptiles, especially the geico…

5 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Catering services in high demand as Milad (PBUH) celebrations intensify

As Pakistan prepares to celebrate the birthday of the Holy Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) on September…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

PCB official says domestic competitions not subservient to international assignments

PCB Director High-Performance, Tournament Director Champions One Day Cup Nadeem Khan has said that the…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Experts suggests lifestyle changes to control diabetes

The Health experts addressing a symposium on Saturday stressed lifestyle changes to prevent diabetes which…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Pakistan team to compete in 5th World Nomad Games 2024

Pakistan's combined contingent is all set to participate in the 5th World Nomad Games, scheduled…

6 hours ago