The Loss of Our Dignity | La pérdida de nuestra dignidad

By Antonio Saravia, Brujula Digital:

We lack gasoline, diesel, dollars, medicine, meat, and rice. Inflation runs rampant (nobody trusts the INE). We can’t travel on roads, and the maze of taxes and regulations crushes private enterprise, condemning us to informality. We live blocked, helplessly watching as political power fills the news with scandals while lining their pockets with corruption and perks.

The MAS has stolen our economy, our Republic, our future, and now our dignity. We no longer know who we are or where we’re headed. We are scared, silenced, and worst of all, getting used to bowing our heads and accepting humiliation. MAS is stealing our “ajayu.”

But the real problem isn’t just MAS and its thieves, opportunists, and abusers. The core issue is the paradigm MAS represents: statism. When the state dominates the economy, it inevitably grows, consuming resources, expanding inefficiency, and suppressing private activity. Defeating MAS in 2025 won’t matter if we don’t change the societal paradigm. Living off the state only conditions us to accept humiliation—whether hoping for a handout, celebrating scarce goods in the market, or feeling relief after a short fuel line.

What should we do? If the problem is statism, the solution lies on the opposite side: liberalism. The real answer is to remove the state’s dominance and empower individuals. This means stabilizing the economy by cutting public spending, fiercely protecting private property, and guaranteeing equality before the law as the foundation of individual freedom.

But let’s be practical—the stakes are high. What must we do once MAS is out of power in 2025? Here are eight essential measures.

  1. Rebuild Reserves and Stabilize the Economy: Eliminate export quotas, price controls, and inefficient regulations. Promote private sector growth and lift bans on transgenic crops to boost exports.
  2. Cut Public Spending and Downsize Government: Halve public sector employees, privatize or dissolve inefficient state-owned companies, and reduce government spending to 30% of GDP.
  3. Labor Market Flexibility: Simplify hiring and firing processes, eliminate double bonuses, and reduce employer liabilities to encourage formal job creation.
  4. Deregulate and Simplify Taxes: Remove export quotas, price controls, and excessive regulations. Lower taxes to improve the business climate and promote competition without protectionist tariffs.
  5. End Pension Nationalization: Allow citizens to choose their pension administrators and foster competition.
  6. Open Fuel Imports: Allow free importation of fuels and remove taxes to reduce subsidy burdens.
  7. Guarantee Legal Security: Attract investment by reforming the justice system and ensuring consistent enforcement of the law.
  8. Modernize Education and Healthcare: Implement deep reforms, including private sector involvement through vouchers, to improve quality and efficiency.

These measures aim to reduce the state’s interference, restore individual responsibility, and reclaim our dignity.

Antonio Saravia, PhD in Economics (Twitter: @tufisaravia)

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