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| Clashes between demonstrators and security forces in Santiago have been going on for two weeks (AFP Photo/Martin BERNETTI) |
Santiago (AFP) - It is not poverty that is driving Chile's middle class into the streets to join massive protests: it is debt, brought on by sky-high private health and education costs that have created an economic fragility many find unbearable.
That is why
so many have taken part in two weeks of social upheaval, protesting against the
economic policies of Chile's ruling elite.
Chile has
an economic record that is the envy of Latin America: poverty has never been
lower, dropping from 40 percent to less than 10 percent in 30 years, and
transforming this country of 18 million into one where middle class citizens
are the majority.
But for
many, the ultra-liberal economic model inherited from the Augusto Pinochet
dictatorship (1973-90) -- which privatized water, health, education and
pensions -- has generated a "permanent worry" about unexpected
expenses.
Nicolas
Achondo, 33, was forced to close his restaurant.
After
paying bills, wages and taxes, he had nothing left for private health
insurance.
A motorbike
accident left him owing thousands of dollars for treatment.
"I
couldn't pay, they put me on the debtors list. That closes all doors to you:
you can no longer get a bank loan or rent an apartment," he said.
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Protesters
are mostly angry about high private health and education costs --
alongside low
public standards -- and insufficient state pensions (AFP Photo/
Martin BERNETTI)
|
"I no
longer had access to credit and my business started generating debts. It's very
unfair."
Thanks to
help from his family, he managed to pay off his debts but has no capital to
relaunch his restaurant business. He now wants to emigrate to Canada.
"We
don't get state subsidies. The only thing we can do is access bank loans to pay
for housing, health, education, clothing," said Achondo.
His parents
suffered the same fate. They owned a video store in the 1980s-90s but fell
victim to evolving technology.
They
managed to pay for their two eldest children's private education without
needing loans, but could not afford the same for their younger two children,
both of whom are in the vastly inferior public school system.
'With or
without uterus'
Marisol
Berrios, a social worker, took out loans to pay for her two children's higher
education.
"Now
they're both university professors but they have insecure contracts. They
receive the minimum wage and have no health care."
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At least 20
people have been killed since the protests began two weeks ago,
with sporadic incidents
of looting, arson and street violence (AFP Photo/Martin BERNETTI)
|
In a model
with minimal state intervention, profitability is king.
As is often
is the case, women are the hardest hit. They have to pay up to three times as
much as men for health insurance when they want children.
"There
are 'with uterus' contracts and 'without uterus' contracts that are cheaper.
You pay a higher percentage when you're fertile," said Berrios.
Women also
pay more in old age, says the 59-year-old, who admits to fearing retirement.
"I
will retire in one year and my pension will be 170,000 pesos ($230)," said
Berrios, who currently earns 1.2 million pesos ($1,620) a month.
"I
went into depression about it this summer."
Health,
education and pensions may be the biggest worries but on top of that are
increases in electricity costs, a proliferation of motorway tolls around
Santiago and an unregulated medication market.
For fed-up
Chileans, it's this accumulation of expenses that weighs so heavily.
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Decades of
pent-up frustration have come pouring out over the last two weeks as
Chileans
protest against social and economic inequality (AFP Photo/Martin BERNETTI)
|
It was
against this backdrop that a seemingly innocuous 3.75 percent hike in the price
of a metro ticket lit a fuse under decades of pent-up frustration.
In a bid to
douse the flames of discontent, conservative President Sebastian Pinera
announced a raft of social measures: suspending a 9.2 percent hike in
electricity bills and an annual 3.5 percent increase in toll charges.
But that
didn't calm the public.
"Chile
has awoken," has become one of the main slogans of anti-government
protesters since October 18.
"We've
woken up to the brutality of the system," said Berrios.




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