TV debate questions breach of university funding law

In the 'QR!' program on Canal E, experts analyzed the government's university funding project and compared it to the current law. Germán Pinazo, vice-rector of the Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento, stated that the executive is breaching an existing regulation backed by the judiciary. The discussion highlighted budgetary obligations and effects on salaries and scholarships.

During an episode of the 'QR!' program, hosted by Pablo Caruso on Canal E, the national government's bill to reform public university funding was debated. The focus was on differences with the current legislation, approved by Congress and supported by a judicial precautionary measure obligating the state to ensure necessary funds.

Germán Pinazo, vice-rector of the Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento, stressed that the executive is not complying with this law. 'The executive is not only breaching a law doubly ratified by Congress, but also a judicial ruling ordering payment,' he stated. The current regulation covers salary adjustments for teachers, funding for operational expenses, and maintenance of student scholarships.

Pinazo dismissed the official argument of fiscal shortage, noting that the Congress Budget Office estimates a cost of 0.23% of GDP for the law. In comparison, other government measures involve revenue losses exceeding that amount. 'Claiming there are no funds to comply with the law while promoting measures that forgo greater income is an institutional provocation,' he added.

Regarding the new project, Pinazo noted it proposes a 12.4% salary increase, inadequate to offset the over 50% loss in purchasing power since November 2023. The debate also emphasized the crucial role of Argentina's university system in scientific research and professional training, with high regional enrollment rates.

相关文章

Tense Chamber of Deputies session debating 2026 Budget, with opposition protesting cuts amid government economic projections.
AI 生成的图像

Deputies debate 2026 Budget in tense session

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像

The Chamber of Deputies began a tense session to debate the 2026 Budget, where the officialism achieved quorum and bets on a chapter-by-chapter vote. The opposition criticizes cuts in education, health, and disability, while defending derogations of recent laws. The Government projects 10.4% inflation and 5% GDP growth.

Federal judge Martín Cormick suspended the presidential decree halting the University Financing Law and ordered the government to immediately implement salary increases for teachers and student scholarships. The ruling deems the decree arbitrary and illegal, violating the separation of powers by disregarding Congress's insistence. The decision addresses a claim by the National Interuniversity Council to safeguard the right to education.

由 AI 报道

The Argentine government is promoting a new University Financing Law to compensate universities that have been demanding more budget for months. The initiative will enter via decree and be published in the Official Bulletin next Monday. It could be addressed in extraordinary sessions.

UDI deputies Jorge Alessandri and Guillermo Ramírez warned they will file a constitutional accusation against Finance Minister Nicolás Grau if the government insists on reintroducing a provision that makes it harder to dismiss contract public servants in the public sector readjustment bill. This 'tying law', deemed immoral by the UDI, aims to secure jobs for government allies, sparking divisions within the opposition and criticism from the ruling coalition. The announcement, made on Thursday, plans to introduce the motion in March.

由 AI 报道

The Colombian government, led by President Gustavo Petro, announced legal actions against 17 governors refusing to apply the economic emergency decree, as the Constitutional Court reviews its legality. This clash creates uncertainty over collected taxes, such as the 19% VAT on liquors, and potential refunds if the measure is ruled unconstitutional. Experts warn that criminal penalties are unlikely and highlight the complexity of reimbursements.

Javier Milei's government is pushing for approval of its labor reform in the Senate by early February, convening opposition leaders. Meanwhile, Salta Governor Gustavo Sáenz warns of fiscal impacts on provinces, and Peronism presents an alternative project without a unified stance.

由 AI 报道

Following last week's announcement of plans for an economic emergency decree, Interior Minister Armando Benedetti confirmed its signing by all cabinet members on December 18 and filing the next day. The measure addresses a 16.3 trillion peso shortfall in the 2026 budget after tax reform's failure, targeting high-income sectors to secure public debt payments and avoid rising country risk.

 

 

 

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝