DAVOS: One Year Later, Millei Takes His Victory Lap Over The Globalists
He made big promises last year... and now he came back with receipts

While much of the world was still reeling from the Pandemic and the leaders who failed their way through it, Argentina was charting a new path.
After a century of failure, Argentina embraced new leadership and a new vision of the future. A vision that turned its back on the same socialist priorities the globalists have been trying to force Western nations to embrace for decades.
If his experiment fails, his country has just found one more way to fail among so many others. But if it succeeds? It holds up a damning mirror to the lie they’ve all been telling us.
After the speech he gave last year making bold promises, and declaring that everyone else was wrong, he’s had a year to put his ideas to the test.
Javier Milei speaks truth to power in Davos.🔥🔥🔥
“Davos has become to crumble, and I hope the idea of freedom have begun to emerge” …last few seconds of clip. pic.twitter.com/xB1bTJqvpj— floridanow1 (@floridanow1) January 23, 2025
Since then, other countries — America among them — have risen to embrace that same vision of a free people rooted in principles of liberty.
South America’s second-largest economy is showing signs of improvement after a deep slump exacerbated by President Javier Milei’s austerity.
Wages in Argentina grew 4.6% in October from September, surpassing monthly inflation for the seventh straight month after price increases wiped out paychecks earlier in the year. With wages picking up, the government estimates that the poverty declined below 39% in the third quarter after surpassing 54% at the start of the year.
Fishing, finance and mining helped drive annual growth in November, while construction and manufacturing posted declines. Argentina’s third-quarter growth was driven by capital expenditures, consumer spending, and exports. —Bloomberg
One of the surest metrics of recovery in a country that had double-digit MONTHLY inflation and TRIPLE digit yearly cumulative inflation? Follow the inflation back to its source and see if the situation has changed.
It has. For the first time in over 100 years, Argentina is no longer deficit spending.
Argentina brought in its first budget surplus in more than a decade in 2024, data published on Friday showed, marking a win for libertarian President Javier Milei and his sweeping austerity push in his first full year in office.
The nation’s budget surplus came in at 1.76 trillion pesos, or 0.3% of gross domestic product (GDP) in the full year, the economy ministry said. Meanwhile the primary fiscal balance, which excludes debt payments, was up to a 10.41 trillion peso surplus, or 1.8% of the GDP. — Reuters
Here is where the economy stands now:
In December 2024, Argentina emerged from the severe recession it entered in late 2023. Also, annual inflation is down from near 300% last April to nearly 100% (or about 2.5% monthly).
“Milei’s government has achieved what many consider a miracle in terms of cutting down inflation and stabilizing the economy and the US dollar’s price, two long-standing Argentinian traumas,” says Juan Pablo Ferrero of the Department of Politics, Languages and International Studies at the University of Bath. “These are notable accomplishments upon which Milei is now basing his political success.” — GlobalFinance
With Social Security set to go bankrupt sometime during the 48th President’s term unless we can fix our own economy, maybe there’s some lessons we can learn from his experiment. Lessons we can apply to our own, while obstructionists try their hardest to subvert DOGE and push petty agendas like DEI.