U👉 El número de beneficiarios pasó de 80,000 a 1.2 millones en los últimos 20 años. El gobierno ha iniciado una revisión exhaustiva tras descubrir que solo el 20% de los casos estaban justificados. Se han enviado cartas a 300,000 titulares y se espera que la cifra real se reduzca significativamente.
👉 Seguí en #OtraMañana
📺 a24.com/vivo
👉 Seguí en #OtraMañana
📺 a24.com/vivo
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00:00This must be one of the most terrible cases of corruption.
00:05Not because of the amount, but because they didn't leave a single area
00:11without intervening by doing business and doing political clientelism.
00:15This is terrible.
00:16Totally. A very sensitive area apart, right?
00:18Yes, but also because of the amount.
00:20Because of the amount of pensions and invalidities that grew in Argentina.
00:24They went from 80,000 in the last 20 years to 1.2 million.
00:28Yes, and during the revisions last year, they were like, what happened to this?
00:33Because they were numbers that were not sustained.
00:36They were not sustained in any way.
00:38How can it go from a number like 80,000 to...
00:41A country at war.
00:42Exactly. A country at war. Or with several wars, I would tell you.
00:46Well, the novelty with this issue is that the government has just sent
00:50300,000 letters, documents, to the owners of pensions and invalidities.
00:55Basically, because I recorded it last year,
00:58only 20% of those who had been cited or consulted
01:03were able to explain, or were basically in line.
01:08Basically, only 20% were in line.
01:10A census, a new census.
01:12A new census.
01:13The one that doesn't comply, the one that doesn't show up, automatically loses the pension.
01:17Exactly. A medical review has to be presented in PAMI.
01:21There are a number of procedures.
01:23And basically, this first citation, which is 300,000 people...
01:28Yes, again, there are 1.2 million people charging.
01:30Yes, totally. What I hear is a really big number.
01:33Yes, the first one.
01:34I know, that's why.
01:35Can there be two more?
01:36No, three.
01:37Three more equals.
01:38Three more. It's a quarter of the total, we agree.
01:40I say, but they will be housed in Chaco, in Mendoza, in Santa Fe, in San Luis,
01:44in Tucumán and in the province of Buenos Aires.
01:46Chaco, where there are places that have 80% of the inhabitants with pensions.
01:49Historically, Chaco is a province totally out of the law in all these kinds of issues.
01:55And in the case of pensions, it was where it was most noticed, governed by penanism,
02:00until very recently, because it recently took over León 2.0.
02:04After this, I hope they start taking out the signs of places to park...
02:08Totally.
02:09...for disabled people in the city of Buenos Aires.
02:11For example, you have three or four per block.
02:13It's full, it's full.
02:14It has to do with this.
02:15You have a certificate like this, you can automatically ask...
02:18Your sign.
02:19Your sign.
02:20Your sign, yes. Go check it later, right?
02:22No, well, you have to see.
02:23Totally.
02:24That's why I hope the city of Buenos Aires, in line with this census, starts to cross the data.
02:28Yes, because it's that issue more and more.
02:30I mean, per block, in the Palermo area, it's impressive.
02:33You don't see it in any city in the world.
02:34Impressive.
02:35In any city in the world.
02:36No, no.
02:37You have up to three or four per block.
02:38Yes.
02:39Two in one hand, two in the other.
02:40And you say, hey, what happened in the city of Buenos Aires?
02:42Yes, yes, yes.
02:43In the corner of my house, in Luis Maria Campos, I have...
02:46All the time.
02:47In one block, I have three.
02:48Yes.
02:49I mean, it's unfeasible, right?
02:50So many people with disabilities.
02:52It is, among other things, the effect of this too.
02:54Yes, it has to do with this, surely.
02:56Well, for now, this measure is there.
02:58It has to be submitted to a review, as I told you, in PAMI.
03:02The government plans to save 900 billion pesos, which is a lot of money.
03:07A lot of money.
03:08It's practically a billion pesos when this is regulated.
03:12So it's money that can later end up being spent elsewhere, obviously.
03:16Now, seriously, they didn't leave one to do it.
03:18Nothing.
03:19What happens is that this is very rude now.
03:21It's very rude.
03:22Everything is rude.
03:23The social plans are rude.
03:24Direct corruption in public work.
03:26Everything is rude.
03:27Now.
03:28But here's the thing.
03:29Did you pass?
03:30These are very sensitive issues.
03:31Yes.
03:32Well, here are other data.
03:34150 deceased and 200 prisoners who were still being charged.
03:38200 prisoners.
03:39There were even many fugitives who were recaptured by the justice system.
03:43Curiously, when they were recaptured, they realized that they were charging this kind of invalid pension.
03:48This was the first review they did once they saw the completely absurd growth of pensions for invalidities.
03:55They did a first check.
03:57Yes.
03:58With 20,000 people.
03:59A small mapping, obviously, compared to the rest.
04:01Well, 20% is the rule.
04:03All right.
04:04So, you have to think that this average is probably the same.
04:09You should have, instead of 1,200,000, you should have 250,000 to 280,000 pensions.
04:14Totally.
04:15Totally.
04:16We'll have to see the final number, but yes.
04:17It will be more or less.
04:18It's the parameter.
04:19So, in that sense, they are working to adjust and put in order a sector that was totally
04:27outlawed for a long time and that with the Kirchnerism in recent years had grown exponentially.
04:34And taking advantage of the pandemic, forget it.
04:37Well, the pandemic was a reason, a tremendous excuse.
04:40Now, the issue of the permissions per block is an urgent issue to review.
04:49Urgent.
04:50Urgent.
04:51But what does it have to do with this?
04:52Because if I show up in the city and say, look, I have this certificate, you are forced to leave me a place.
04:56Totally.
04:57But it has to do with this.
04:58Totally.
04:59What happens in the city of Buenos Aires, I don't know in other cities, what is happening
05:02in the city of Buenos Aires with parking permits for disability is unprecedented in the world.
05:07Besides, one warns you because it is increasingly difficult to park, so maybe in another place
05:12you don't realize.
05:13All the time there are signs.
05:14Exactly.
05:15So, you see, how can it be that here, here, here in the other block?
05:17It's impressive.