BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) – Argentina used to have an extensive, free public health system that pretty much ensured that everybody who couldn’t afford private insurance was covered for everything.
Takeaways from AP report on President Javier Milei’s dramatic cuts to Argentine health care
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) – Argentina used to have an extensive, free public health system that pretty much ensured that everybody who couldn’t afford private insurance was covered for everything.
But in the year-and-a-half since President Javier Milei rode to power on a promise to eliminate the nation’s sky-high inflation and huge budget deficits, the radical economist’s austerity program has taken a brutal toll on the nation’s public hospitals and its population of poor, retired and unemployed patients who have lost access to vital treatment.
In gutting key federal health agencies, Milei’s sweeping layoffs and deep spending cuts have mirrored moves taken by the administration of his close ally, U.S. President Donald Trump.
Here are takeaways from an Associated Press report about how a libertarian revolution cheered by the global far-right is affecting the health of Argentines.