Milei Raises Government Spending While Pledging Zero Deficit
With midterms ahead, Milei promises more funding for pensions, health, and education.
Argentine President Javier Milei has built his presidency around a single rule: zero deficit. Yet even as he vows to keep the budget balanced, his new 2026 plan raises pensions, health, and education spending. The shift comes just a month before midterm elections, testing whether his austerity brand can survive political reality.
Since taking office in December 2023, Milei slashed billions in spending, froze public works, and cut federal funding to provinces, among other austerity measures. University and health budgets were hit especially hard, leading to layoffs and reduced services. Retirees saw their benefits shrink as inflation eroded payments, while tighter rules limited access to pensions. As a result, Argentina reached its first primary surplus in more than a decade and its first full-year surplus in 123 years. But the cost was steep: Consumption plunged and poverty spiked above 50 percent before easing in recent months.
The political backlash hit hardest in the province of Buenos Aires—home to nearly 40 percent of voters—where Milei's coalition suffered a defeat earlier this month. In response, Milei rolled out a 2026 budget that expands spending in areas he once vowed to shrink.
The plan increases pensions and disability payments by 5 percent, boosts health spending by 17 percent, and lifts education spending by 8 percent—all above projected inflation. As Martín Rodríguez Yebra of La Nación put it, the package amounts to "a white flag in the three battles that eroded his popularity this election year."
Milei insists fiscal balance remains "set in stone." The numbers partly back him up: total revenues for FY 2026 are projected at 15.6 percent of gross domestic product, up 0.2 percentage points from 2025. On paper, the budget still balances.
The biggest challenge is political. Without a congressional majority, Milei has relied on vetoes to block deficit-boosting bills. By conceding targeted increases, he hopes to blunt those challenges while courting centrists who dislike Peronist populism but remain wary of his radical cures. The October 26 legislative elections will decide whether he grows his foothold in Congress or stays boxed in.
At the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) earlier this year, Milei handed Elon Musk a chainsaw—a symbol of his vow to slash the state. Now, with midterms looming, he is testing whether that brand of austerity can withstand political reality. Voters will decide whether the chainsaw keeps buzzing or runs out of fuel.
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Doing the right thing always comes with strings attached. Milei made his point and promised that there would be some initial pain. If he relaxes the cuts for a while without abandoning the overall process he may yet prevail in downsizing government and promoting wealth and private enterprise. Only time will tell.
Oddly not the same view you have for a different leader.
Trump's policies are very much like those of Peron, not like Milei.
In the world of charliehall, everything is orange, and orange is bad. Does that about sum it up, chucklefuck?
Sorry that facts trigger you.
I like your writing style, Cesar. Glad to see two pieces from you today.
Godspeed Milei
"Milei Raises Government Spending While Pledging Zero Deficit
With midterms ahead, Milei promises more funding for pensions, health, and education."
Note to Senor Milei: Let your citizens provide for their own pensions, healthcare and education, and a lot of your spending problems will cease.
So the poor get no education. Milei so destroyed Argentina's economy that the majority of the population was below poverty level. In a generation those uneducated unemployables will rebel and send the other half of the population into poverty -- assuming they survive.
Argintina has had a surplus. The article doesn't give numbers. There is a possibility that he can increese spending and not have a deficit.
The article does a hand waving of "the numbers back him up"
Critical Assessment of Milei's Economic Policies and Administration
President Milei's claims of achieving fiscal balance appear to rely on accounting practices that defer rather than eliminate government obligations. The administration's approach to deficit reduction has included postponing payments to creditors and implementing measures that directly impact citizens' financial resources.
Several concerning developments have emerged during this administration:
The government promoted a digital currency called Libra, which subsequently ceased operations after collecting investor funds. Key family members of the administration were allegedly involved in this initiative.
Healthcare policy decisions have resulted in restricted access to essential medications, with reports indicating approximately 100 fatalities linked to drug shortages. These restrictions allegedly coincided with a pharmaceutical payment scheme involving percentage-based commissions on state-subsidized drug sales.
The economic strategy appears to center on carry trade arrangements that have primarily benefited financial institutions and established economic interests, financed through IMF borrowing. Critics argue this approach has resulted in economic contraction rather than sustainable growth.
Many observers suggest Argentina's current economic position has deteriorated compared to the 2001 crisis period. Former supporters from libertarian circles reportedly withdrew their backing early in the administration due to the retention of previous finance ministry officials associated with prior economic difficulties.
These allegations raise questions about the consistency between stated libertarian principles and actual policy implementation.
Wow, you seem desperate to believe that he's violating his pledge.
Obviously, a no deficit pledge can be consistent with increased spending, if there are increased revenues. You even concede there are increased revenues!
So, why so desperate to think he's breaking his pledge?
Perhaps because Trump is giving him a massive bailout?
In Argentina, President Javier Milei has screwed the economy up so badly he needs a $20 billion bailout. That’s because his “free market” economics don’t actually work.