It's not a slogan. It's a plan with dates.
Argentina 2035
Phase 1 / 9
We start with what no one wants to do: looking under the rug. Every hospital and public office undergoes an audit. Not to persecute, but to understand what we have and what we lack.
In parallel, we clear the board of laws and regulations that only serve to create obstacles. If a regulation doesn’t help someone work or live better, it goes. It’s that simple.
Phase 2 / 9
The economy ceases to be a black box. The Economic Power is born as an independent referee, ensuring that no one sticks their hand where they shouldn’t.
We lower taxes to 17% for those just starting out and 25% for large companies. And most importantly: your retirement is yours again. The patches end; now every worker has their personal retirement account, so that their effort is truly theirs.
Phase 3 / 9
We turn education around. Goodbye to primary and secondary as we knew them; now the path is Essential, Social, and Specialization.
It’s not just about changing the name. It’s about ensuring that every school, wherever it is, has the basic services and connection it needs so that a kid from a small town has the same chances as one from the capital.
Phase 4 / 9
The train becomes the pulse of the country again. Not as a romantic memory, but as the backbone of our logistics.
As the tracks advance, so do our youth. We launch the national training program; kids from all provinces living and learning together. Because national unity isn’t proclaimed, it’s built by knowing each other’s reality.
Phase 5 / 9
We seek excellence for real. Those who teach well, earn more; we reward teachers who achieve real results with their students.
We give provinces the tools to compete and specialize, giving them back the lead roles. And in health, we strengthen regional operating rooms. Getting quality surgery shouldn’t depend on having to travel hundreds of miles to a big city.
Phase 6 / 9
Río Cuarto becomes the heart of the map, the hub where roads, trains, and planes meet. Argentina begins to feel close.
We cross the Strait of Magellan with the tunnel that finally joins Tierra del Fuego with the mainland by land. And to top off the integration, federal exchange scholarships allow a student to finish their specialization at the other end of the country. Talent circulating everywhere.
Phase 7 / 9
We update labor rules so that hiring isn’t a risk and working is a real opportunity.
We start producing our own generic medicines and critical disposable supplies to avoid depending on anyone. And in Buenos Aires, we make a historic decision: we divide it into three so that the Delta, the Atlantic, and the Pampa have the government their own scale deserves.
Phase 8 / 9
We open the field. We remove tariffs on the inputs our factories need to produce and compete with the world.
Health logistics reach vanguard levels, with a cold chain that guarantees vaccines in every corner. And we adopt a simple prevention culture: voluntary mask use when one feels unwell, as a gesture of respect to the person traveling next to you.
Phase 9 / 9
We reached where we wanted to be. Less than 5% unemployment; the private sector pushing with a force we haven’t seen in decades.
Our ports, from Bahía Blanca to Quequén, are dredged and ready for the world’s largest ships. Argentina doesn’t just look at the sea; now it truly takes advantage of it to bring out everything we’re capable of producing.