Cry for change | Clamor por un cambio

By Humberto Vacaflor, Los Tiempos:

General Juan José Zúñiga said it clumsily, but Vice Minister Raúl Mayta says very clearly: what happened in 2006 was “bread for the day and hunger for tomorrow,” and all Bolivians hope that this new version of the MAS will accept its failure and change your “model.”

Well, tomorrow has arrived and brought hunger, while the country’s risk has passed 2,000 points and Bolivia is in first place, with forecasts of growth of less than 2% because gas exports have run out.

As a supreme example of cynicism, a Chilean company expresses its interest in exploiting lithium from some Bolivian salt flats, given that the MAS government does not do so despite having used 1 billion dollars in overpriced purchases.

In 2006, the gas reserves justified the plans to export LNG to the United States and Mexico, but the Masistas decided, for unknown reasons, that oil investments should be discouraged.

They did not realize their mistake even when those reserves began to show that they would be exhausted in the very short term. If they related one thing to another, they would have reconsidered and approved the rules to correct the error.

But they continued with the same thing, discouraging investments with rules that set very low prices for crude oil and gas. Until now they offer 27 dollars per barrel of oil produced in the country, which they maintained even when the international price reached 160.

Someone, in the Ministry of Hydrocarbons, has now observed, 18 years after 2006, that taxes on hydrocarbon production must be lowered and the subsidy policy must be reviewed, which harms the economy, as it is now admitted, with cynical attitude, the coca grower Morales.

Expert centers, such as the Milenio Foundation, are recommending taking some measure to correct the course of things before the collapse arrives, if there is still time to avoid it.

The recommendations include turning to the IMF for a lifesaving loan, something that David Choquehuanca was considering doing in his eventual presidential term in the event that Arce resigned from office as a result of the military antics of June 26.

The thousands of public employees who came out to Murillo Square in defense of Lucho shouted very loudly because they knew that any possibility of the country going to the IMF would mean massive layoffs.

As Vice Minister Mayta says, tomorrow has arrived and has brought hunger, a product of the disastrous economic policy of the MAS.

Siglo21bolivia.com

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