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“Whoever feels discriminated against will be protected by the law”

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“Whoever feels discriminated against will be protected by the law”

The presidential spokesperson, Manuel Adorni, pointed out this Friday that the announcement of the closure of Inadi made by the Government is part of what President Javier Milei promised during the campaign and maintained that, beyond the elimination of the organization, “whoever feels discriminated against “He will be under the protection of the law.”

The official justified the presidential decision and emphasized the importance of evaluating whether public services “are effectively in line with the needs of what people need.”

In an interview with online radio FutuRöck, the spokesperson clarified that the Government “would have liked to have the entire State already reformed and clean up what the taxpayer does not have to be responsible for, not just Inadi.”

Regarding the economic plan and adjustment, Adorni asked himself “What is the alternative? In recent decades, there has been a decline, it is not only a question of poor people, inflation, and destroyed public accounts.”

“We are trying to resolve some imbalances that were going to lead us to a macabre outcome. When you make a five-point adjustment (of GDP), what is going to move the most is pension spending,” he said about the situation of retirees and stated that the Government understands “what is the light at the end of the tunnel.”

Asked about the case of the dining room run by Margarita Barrientos, who denounced the interruption of food delivery, Adorni maintained that perhaps “it has not met the requirements” requested by the Ministry of Human Capital.

Finally, he said that the cuts fall on “the caste” and gave the cut to “public works” as an example.

Adorni, on inflation

The presidential spokesperson highlighted that Argentina was immersed in a “hyperinflationary tunnel” and that the Government of Javier Milei, based on the economic measures taken in these months of administration, was able to avoid it, however, it contemplated the “bad drink” that could arise. cause some policies, such as pension adjustment.

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“On December 11 – a day after the transfer of Government – we began to tell what the inflationary dynamics were that we saw every day and that we were in a hyperinflationary tunnel that we doubted if we were going to be able to avoid, which we did, but The situation was serious and delicate and we are going through the correction of the disaster that we received,” Adorni told online radio Futurock, alluding to the “inheritance” of the Alberto Fernández administration.

Likewise, the official assured that the current administration understands “the problem of inflation, knows how to solve it and understands why half of Argentina is poor and what has happened in recent decades to be in this situation.”

“It is not only a question of poverty, but also of inflation, lack of investment, destroyed public accounts,” said the spokesperson.

Along these lines, he recalled: “We always noticed the great snub in which we found ourselves immersed on December 10, that we were going to go through some very complex months in terms of inflation and effectiveness, and the bad experience we were going to go through, trying to correct a lot of imbalances that were going to lead us to a macabre outcome.”

In this regard, he noted that “when a five-point adjustment is made to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – a figure outlined by Milei during his inauguration speech – what happened, for example, with the pension adjustment, happens because pension spending is most of the national budget.”

“In the face of a budget movement, what is going to move the most is pension spending because it is the most representative of the budget,” insisted Adorni, who assured: “We understand what the light at the end of the tunnel is and we actually see it.”

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