Government backs off on budget cuts, cites ‘clerical errors’

The federal government has backed off on two budget cuts announced last week, explaining that they were the result of clerical errors.

President López Obrador told a press conference yesterday that public universities would receive an extra 4 or 5 billion pesos (US $200 to $250 million) next year after several higher education institutes including the National Autonomous University (UNAM) were highly critical of cuts to their budgets.

“We reviewed the budget and found that there was a reduction in the budget for public universities . . . That’s why the decision was taken to correct the error. An adjustment will be made to the government’s operating expenses in relation to the secretariats, government agencies [and] the executive,” he said.

Under the government’s 5.8-trillion-peso (US $288-billion) 2019 Economic Package, presented by Finance Secretary Carlos Urzúa Saturday, UNAM, the Metropolitan Autonomous University (UAM) and the National Polytechnic University would have seen their budgets cut by 6.2%, 7.7% and 4.7% respectively.

At least two marches had been scheduled for today in Mexico City in protest.

Later yesterday, Foreign Affairs Secretary Marcelo Ebrard said that there had also been a “clerical error” in the allocation of funding for Mexico’s overseas consulates but added that it would be fixed.

This year, consulates received 244 million pesos (US $12.3 million) in funding but in the 2019 budget they were only allocated 42 million pesos (US $2.1 million), an 83% reduction.

“We’ll correct it . . . I suppose or we suppose that it is a clerical error because [an] 85% [cut] is almost like disappearing [the consulates] so we’re going to leave [their funding] as it was,” Ebrard told reporters.

The new government, which took office on December 1, also said that a clerical error was to blame for the failure to include in its new education plan a paragraph that describes UNAM as an autonomous learning institute. That triggered claims that the López Obrador administration planned to strip it of autonomy.

“. . . If it’s necessary we’re willing to add the part about autonomy,” the president said.

Source: El Financiero (sp), Milenio (sp) 

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
aerial view of the scene of the operation to kill cartel boss El Mencho in Tapalpa de Allende, Jalisco

No tape, no guards: How did reporters access El Mencho’s home after the military operation?

0
Among the people who entered a house that is said to have been the CJNG leader's final hideout were journalists from the newspapers Milenio and El Universal, who found what appears to reveal the cartel's monthly operating expenses.
middle east

More than 1,300 Mexicans have been evacuated from the war-torn Middle East

0
Mexican embassies in the region are supporting citizens by arranging commercial flights through safe open airspace as well as helping with the logistics of land travel.
fishing boats in Gulf

Gulf cleanup effort is complete, but the question remains: What caused the oil slick in the first place?

0
Sanctions cannot be imposed without a culprit, but earlier efforts to blame at first a natural seepage and then an unnamed private vessel have been set aside for lack of conclusive evidence.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity