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I am your ultimate sword, you have my full support." With this phrase, President Javier Milei gave strong support to the Minister of Economy, Luis “Toto” Caputo, the day after announcing the package of measures with which he will try to “avoid a catastrophe”, as the Government proposes in relation to the inheritance that he received from the management of Alberto Fernández. In the third Cabinet meeting that he led since assuming the Presidency, Milei was satisfied with the minister's announcement: “ Toto's bank is full. We need to put our accounts in order and that is why we have to cut unnecessary expenses and spurious things . And this is the first step to avoid collapse,” the Head of State stated to his troops.
The president highlighted the reception that the Europe Mobile Number List package of measures had among economists and even appreciated that fellow national deputy Ricardo López Murphy described the announcement as “shocking.” He did so in response to those who consider that the minister fell short in the adjustment. “I am very happy with the measures. We did what we said we were going to do. Nobody can tell us otherwise. This is necessary,” he remarked, being able to reconstruct Clarín from unobjectionable sources present at the meeting. In that sense, those close to the President warn that there is no deadline for the program to begin to show encouraging signs and resort to the warning that Caputo made that within “a few months” the situation will be “worse ,” until the variables are accommodated.
You have to take the slap,” Milei conveyed. The President, according to those who heard him in the last few hours, was also satisfied with Caputo's tone in the announcement, despite the ups and downs in the dissemination of the video and the lack of details: “It was didactic, focused on the people. The idea was this and that. Then the fine print will be told to economists and journalists. ”. In that sense, the president asked the official who gave interviews starting this Wednesday to clarify questions that still remain regarding the measures. Daniel Fernández Canedo, director of Economy at Clarín, analyzes the scope of the first adjustment measures announced by the government of Javier Milei.
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