translated from Spanish: Briones referred to IMF and The Economist analyses and asserted that Chile will have “a fairly moderate constitution”

Finance Minister Ignacio Briones spoke to the IMF and The Economist’s analysis of Chile’s constitutional process.In a conversation with Infinite Radio, the Secretary of State stated that “in my experience talking to foreign investors, the subject of the constituent process is always.” Briones noted that what all investors value is that “this is an institutional process, with known rules of the game.” That’s a very important difference from constituent processes in the region that alarm a lot and generate fed up perceptions of risk,” he emphasized. The tax wallet manager said that “it is a shared issue that there are rules of the game here, it is an orderly, democratic process, there is an invitation for everyone to vote this Sunday, this is a party of democracy, it is a very relevant milestone in our political history beyond the result, because it is an opportunity to define what the great rules of the country will be.” Briones also stated that if Apruebo wins, he argued that it will be “a fairly minimal constitution, quite tight, because we are going to agree on the big designs”, but that “in detail engineering, one is going to get closer to what is typical of public policy, which is typical of the law and there we have fewer agreements and that is why that has to be defined by law and democratic debate”. Well, under his perception, “it’s going to be a pretty moderate constitution: there’s going to be the big principles where we have big agreements, it’s not the vision of one end or the other, and it seems to me that investors understand it without prejudice to the risks that naturally the process entails.”



Original source in Spanish

Related Posts

Add Comment