Thousands of Argentines
banged pots and marched through public squares in the rain on Thursday
to protest steep hikes to basic services after President Maurcio Macri slashed subsidies for utilities.
The demonstration marked the first "cacerolazo"
in center-right Macri's government, evoking memories of the pot-banging
protests staged by struggling Argentines during the country's economic
meltdown at the start of the century.
But with wages stagnant and
scant job prospects in an economy mired in recession, many Argentines
say they cannot afford to pay utility bills that in some cases have
jumped by more than 1,000 percent.
"It's abusive, it's completely excessive," said Fernando Monton, a 39-year-old print shop employee who says 30 percent of his salary now goes to paying gas, electricity and water fees.
Protesters marched around the Obelisco, a monument in downtown Buenos Aires, unfurling the country's sky blue and white flag as they struck metal pots and chanted insults at Macri.
Macri
has asked Argentines to be patient while his free-market economic
reforms take time to bear fruit following years of government controls
and swelling budget deficits under his free-spending predecessor
Cristina Fernandez.
But Macri's government has
acknowledged that some utility rates went up too much. His cabinet this
week set a 400 percent cap on increases to natural gas bills for
consumers as it prepared to challenge a court injunction that suspended
them.
"It's still too much! With everything else going up also, it's unreal,"
said 57-year-old housekeeper Catalina Diaz, who added she has barely
used her heater since receiving a 1,000 peso ($68) gas bill, up from 200
pesos last year.
Despite making just $400 per
month, Diaz said she was not eligible for assistance for paying gas
bills that the government promised for low-income households.
Macri
has urged Argentines to strive to conserve energy as the country weans
itself off cheap natural gas made possible by years of frozen fees that
he said left the grid on the brink of collapse.
After
lowering export taxes, ditching trade and currency controls and cutting
the public payroll in a bid to lure private investments, Macri says the
economy will start to turn around in the second half of 2016.
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