The tire manufacturer FATE has shut down, laying off 920 workers and indirectly impacting thousands more, including families of those dismissed. Social pressure and online discussions led to mandatory conciliation, delaying a final decision. The government has criticized FATE and ALUAR's owner as part of a rent-seeking business elite.
The shutdown of FATE, a key tire producer in Argentina, has led to the dismissal of 920 direct workers, with indirect effects on several thousand more. As analyzed in a Perfil article, this occurs amid Javier Milei's libertarian policies, which prioritize imports over local production, extending purchases of foreign tires.
Mandatory conciliation, adopted due to social pressure, has temporarily halted the case's resolution, despite the capitalist logic the government supports. Official statements have criticized FATE and ALUAR's wealthy owner, likening him to Techint's head, as part of a rent-seeking business class sustained by the state for decades.
The article's author argues that, even as the business sector faces policy fallout, there is a cultural bourgeois consensus against workers' interests and living conditions. 'Even as they suffer the consequences of the official libertarian policy, the cultural consensus of the bourgeoisie is against the interests and living conditions of workers,' the author states. He adds that 'it is an ideological issue against social rights'.
This case highlights Milei's economic restructuring, dismantling Argentina's historically subordinate industrial order within global capitalism. Local industrialization, promoted at times under state oversight, has not achieved technological independence. Resistance comes from affected groups, such as workers and unions, amid an offensive on social rights, including support for labor counter-reform.
The debate underscores tensions between subordinate financial insertion, dating from the 1977 law, and the need to prioritize social needs like food in a commodity-producing country.