On repeated occasions and in a few months of managementJorge Macri was responsible for making it clear that the State is there to accompany the private sector. A situation that has been repeated in the City of Buenos Aires for almost 18 years and that, if the same political legacy continues in the government, it is very unlikely that it will ever change. This Thursday, the former mayor of Vicente López once again insisted on his line of thought and political practice. “There is no viable City without the private sector,” the head of Government launched during his speech for the 100th anniversary of the Argentine Chamber of Commerce (CAC).
Photo: Mariano Martino
In the same speech, the Buenos Aires president celebrated that our country is facing a “change of era and a time of great opportunities”.
According to Jorge Macri, In the City there are 137,000 companies that generate more than 1.6 million jobs. In addition, it ensures that, in 2024 alone, more than 50% of the services exported by the country were exported, which represents almost 20% of the national Gross Domestic Product.
The city of Jorge Macri
“There is no viable country or city without the private sector as the protagonist, and part of the cultural change that we are experiencing in Argentina has to do with celebrating the success of the private sector again. I am convinced that if the private sector does well, the country and the City do well.”said Macri at the Alvear Hotel in the presence of the President of the Nation, Javier Milei, and more than 700 guests.
National and provincial public officials, legislators, diplomatic representatives and representatives of different companies were present at the scene.
Among other statements, Mauricio Macri's cousin insisted: “It is time to look again at our ability to transform realities, something that politics can only do in synergy with the private sector.”
In the same speech For too long we struggled in discussions that distanced us from an objective that we should never have abandoned: thinking and building a country on the values of merit, freedom and the culture of work, instead of replacing them with the culture of subsidy, shortcuts and “anything goes”.
Finally, the president reinforced his line: “The work culture and the merit award marked a DNA that we are undoubtedly beginning to recover. We Argentines decided to turn the page”.
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