Fact Check: 44% of Americans rated Elon Musk's efforts with DOGE to reduce spending and the size of the federal government as a success or partial success, down from 47% in April 2023.

Fact Check: 44% of Americans rated Elon Musk's efforts with DOGE to reduce spending and the size of the federal government as a success or partial success, down from 47% in April 2023.

June 15, 2025by TruthOrFake AI
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VERDICT
Needs Research

# Fact Check: "44% of Americans rated Elon Musk's efforts with DOGE to reduce spending and the size of the federal government as a success or partial ...

Fact Check: "44% of Americans rated Elon Musk's efforts with DOGE to reduce spending and the size of the federal government as a success or partial success, down from 47% in April 2023."

What We Know

The claim states that 44% of Americans view Elon Musk's efforts with the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) as a success or partial success, a decrease from 47% in April 2023. This information is supported by a recent survey indicating that public opinion regarding Musk's initiatives has slightly declined, with 56% of respondents rating it as a failure or partial failure, up from 52% (DNyuz).

Additionally, the context of DOGE's formation and its objectives is crucial. Established under the Trump administration, DOGE aims to reduce federal spending through various initiatives, including cutting contracts and grants (BBC). However, the effectiveness of these efforts has been met with skepticism, as evidenced by reports highlighting a lack of transparency and substantial evidence backing claimed savings (BBC, BBC).

Analysis

The survey data indicating a decline from 47% to 44% in public approval of Musk's efforts is corroborated by multiple sources, including a recent article from DNyuz (DNyuz) and NBC News (NBC). The slight drop in approval ratings suggests a growing discontent among the public regarding DOGE's performance, which aligns with criticisms about the agency's transparency and accountability.

While the survey results are credible, the reliability of the sources reporting on DOGE's claimed savings is mixed. The BBC's investigative reporting reveals significant discrepancies in DOGE's reported savings, with many claims lacking adequate documentation or being based on speculative figures (BBC). Furthermore, experts have pointed out that the figures used by DOGE often represent maximum contract values rather than actual savings realized (BBC). This raises questions about the overall effectiveness of DOGE and the credibility of its claims.

The sources reporting on the survey results are reputable, but the context surrounding DOGE's operations and Musk's involvement suggests a complex and potentially misleading narrative about government efficiency and spending reduction.

Conclusion

Needs Research. While the claim about the public's rating of Musk's efforts with DOGE is supported by survey data, the broader context surrounding DOGE's effectiveness and the credibility of its reported savings requires further investigation. The mixed reliability of sources and the lack of transparency in DOGE's operations complicate the assessment of its success. Therefore, additional research is necessary to fully understand the implications of these ratings and the actual impact of DOGE's initiatives.

Sources

  1. How much has Elon Musk's Doge cut from US government spending? - BBC
  2. What is Doge and why has Musk left? - BBC
  3. DOGE's Zombie Contracts: They Were Killed but Have ... - New York Times
  4. Response to the Department of Government Efficiency - Wikipedia
  5. Trump Administration Updates: Musk Appears to ... - New York Times
  6. word里我的每页怎么最多只能是42行?怎么改成44行? - 百度知道
  7. Americans disapprove of Trump's performance, as Republicans ... - DNyuz
  8. Poll: Americans disapprove of Trump's performance, as ... - NBC News

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Fact Check: By quarterbacking Israel’s attack on Iran, Trump brought an end to a particularly demoralizing era in U.S. history The main reason Israel’s massive attack on Iranian leadership, nuclear facilities, and other targets came as a surprise is that no one believes American presidents when they talk about protecting Americans and advancing our interests—especially when they’re talking about the Islamic Republic of Iran. Ever since the 1979 Iranian Revolution, U.S. presidents have wanted an accommodation with Iran—not revenge for holding 52 Americans captive for 444 days, but comity. Ronald Reagan told Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to tear down the Berlin Wall, but when the Iranians’ Lebanese ally Hezbollah killed 17 Americans at the U.S. embassy in Beirut and 241 at the Marine barracks in 1983, he flinched. Bill Clinton wanted a deal with Iran so badly, he helped hide the Iranians’ sponsorship of the group that killed 19 airmen at Khobar Towers in 1996. George W. Bush turned a blind eye to Tehran’s depredations as Shia militias backed by Iran killed hundreds of U.S. troops in Iraq, while Iran’s Syrian ally Bashar al-Assad chartered buses to transport Sunni fighters from the Damascus airport to the Iraqi border, where they joined the hunt for Americans. Barack Obama’s signature foreign policy initiative was the Iran nuclear deal—designed not, as he promised, to stop Tehran’s nuclear weapons program, but to legalize it and protect it under the umbrella of an international agreement, backed by the United States. That all changed with Donald Trump. At last, an American president kept his word. He was very clear about it even before his second term started: Iran can’t have a bomb. Trump wanted it to go peacefully, but he warned that if the Iranians didn’t agree to dismantle their program entirely, they’d be bombed. Maybe Israel would do it, maybe the United States, maybe both, but in any case, they’d be bombed. Trump gave them 60 days to decide, and on day 61, Israel unleashed Operation Rising Lion. Until this morning, when Trump posted on Truth Social to take credit for the raid, there was some confusion about the administration’s involvement. As the operation began, Secretary of State Marco Rubio released a statement claiming that it was solely an Israeli show without any American participation. But even if details about intelligence sharing and other aspects of Israeli-U.S. coordination were hazy, the statement was obviously misleading: The entire operation was keyed to Trump. Without him, the attack wouldn’t have happened as it did, or maybe not at all. Trump spent two months neutralizing the Iranians without them realizing he was drawing them into the briar patch. Iranian diplomats pride themselves on their negotiating skills. Generations of U.S. diplomats have marveled at the Iranians’ ability to wipe the floor with them: It’s a cultural thing—ever try to bargain with a carpet merchant in Tehran? And Trump also praised them repeatedly for their talents—very good negotiators! The Iranians were in their sweet spot and must have imagined they could negotiate until Trump gave in to their demands or left office. But Trump was the trickster. He tied them down for two months, time that he gave to the Israelis to make sure they had everything in order. There’s already lots of talk about Trump’s deception campaign, and in the days and weeks to come, we’ll have more insight into which statements were real and which were faked and which journalists were used, without them knowing it, to print fake news to ensure the operation’s success. One Tablet colleague says it’s the most impressive operational feint since the Normandy invasion. Maybe even more impressive. A few weeks ago, a colleague told me of a brief conversation with a very senior Israeli official who said that Jerusalem and Washington see eye to eye on Gaza and left it at that. As my colleague saw it, and was meant to see it, this was not good news insofar as it suggested a big gap between the two powers on Iran. The deception campaign was so tight, it meant misleading friends casually. It’s now clear that the insanely dense communications environment—including foreign actors like the Iranians themselves, anti-Bibi Israeli journalists, the Gulf states, and the Europeans—served the purpose of the deception campaign. But most significant was the domestic component. Did the Iranians believe reports that the pro-Israel camp was losing influence with Trump and that the “restraintists” were on the rise? Did Iran lobbyist Trita Parsi tell officials in Tehran that his colleagues from the Quincy Institute and other Koch-funded policy experts who were working in the administration had it in the bag? Don’t worry about the neocons—my guys are steering things in a good way. It seems that, like the Iranians, the Koch network got caught in its own echo chamber. Will Rising Lion really split MAGA, as some MAGA influencers are warning? Polls say no. According to a recent Rasmussen poll, 84 percent of likely voters believe Iran cannot have a bomb. Only 9 percent disagree. More Americans think it’s OK for men to play in women’s sports, 21 percent, than those who think Iran should have a bomb. According to the Rasmussen poll, 57 percent favor military action to stop Iran from getting nukes—which means there are Kamala Harris voters, 50 percent of them, along with 73 percent of Trump’s base, who are fine with bombing Iran to stop the mullahs’ nuclear weapons program. A Harvard/Harris poll shows 60 percent support for Israel “to take out Iran’s nuclear weapons program,” with 78 percent support among Republicans. Who thinks it’s reasonable for Iran to have a bomb? In a lengthy X post attacking Mark Levin and others who think an Iranian bomb is bad for America, Tucker Carlson made the case for the Iranian bomb. Iran, he wrote, “knows it’s unwise to give up its weapons program entirely. Muammar Gaddafi tried that and wound up sodomized with a bayonet. As soon as Gaddafi disarmed, NATO killed him. Iran’s leaders saw that happen. They learned the obvious lesson.” The Iranians definitely want a bomb to defend themselves against the United States—NATO, if you prefer—but that’s hardly America First. The threat that an Iranian bomb poses to the United States isn’t really that the Iranians will launch missiles at U.S. cities—not yet, anyway—but that it gives the regime a nuclear shield. It’s bad for America if a nuclear Iran closes down the Straits of Hormuz to set the price for global energy markets. It’s bad for America if a nuclear Iran wages terror attacks on American soil, as it has plotted to kill Trump. An Iranian bomb forces American policymakers, including Trump, to reconfigure policies and priorities to suit the interests of a terror state. It’s fair to argue that your country shouldn’t attack Iran to prevent it from getting a bomb, but reasoning that a terror state that has been killing Americans for nearly half a century needs the bomb to protect itself from the country you live in is nuts. Maybe some Trump supporters are angry and confused because Trump was advertised as the peace candidate. But “no new wars” is a slogan, not a policy. The purpose of U.S. policy is to advance America’s peace and prosperity, and Trump was chosen to change the course of American leadership habituated to confusing U.S. interests with everyone else’s. For years now, the U.S. political establishment has congratulated itself for helping to lift half a billion Chinese peasants out of poverty—in exchange for the impoverishment of the American middle class. George W. Bush wasted young American lives trying to make Iraq and Afghanistan function like America. Obama committed the United States to climate agreements that were designed to make Americans poorer. He legalized Iran’s bomb. So has Operation Rising Lion enhanced America’s peace? If it ends Iran’s nuclear weapons programs, the answer is absolutely yes. Further, when American partners advance U.S. interests, it adds luster to American glory. For instance, in 1982, in what is now popularly known as the Bekaa Valley Turkey Shoot, Israeli pilots shot down more than 80 Soviet-made Syrian jets and destroyed dozens of Soviet-built surface-to-air missile systems. It was a crucial Cold War exhibition that showed U.S. arms and allies were superior to what Moscow could put in the field. Israel’s attacks on Iran have not only disabled a Russian and Chinese partner but also demonstrated American superiority to those watching in Moscow and Beijing. Plus, virtually all of Iran’s oil exports go to China. With the attack last night, Trump brought an end to a particularly demoralizing and dispiriting era in U.S. history, which began nearly 50 years ago with the hostage crisis. In that time, U.S. leadership has routinely appeased a terror regime sustained only by maniacal hatred of America, while U.S. elites from the worlds of policy and academia, media and culture, have adopted the style and language of perfumed third-world obscurantists. All it took was for an American president to keep his word.

Detailed fact-check analysis of: By quarterbacking Israel’s attack on Iran, Trump brought an end to a particularly demoralizing era in U.S. history The main reason Israel’s massive attack on Iranian leadership, nuclear facilities, and other targets came as a surprise is that no one believes American presidents when they talk about protecting Americans and advancing our interests—especially when they’re talking about the Islamic Republic of Iran. Ever since the 1979 Iranian Revolution, U.S. presidents have wanted an accommodation with Iran—not revenge for holding 52 Americans captive for 444 days, but comity. Ronald Reagan told Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to tear down the Berlin Wall, but when the Iranians’ Lebanese ally Hezbollah killed 17 Americans at the U.S. embassy in Beirut and 241 at the Marine barracks in 1983, he flinched. Bill Clinton wanted a deal with Iran so badly, he helped hide the Iranians’ sponsorship of the group that killed 19 airmen at Khobar Towers in 1996. George W. Bush turned a blind eye to Tehran’s depredations as Shia militias backed by Iran killed hundreds of U.S. troops in Iraq, while Iran’s Syrian ally Bashar al-Assad chartered buses to transport Sunni fighters from the Damascus airport to the Iraqi border, where they joined the hunt for Americans. Barack Obama’s signature foreign policy initiative was the Iran nuclear deal—designed not, as he promised, to stop Tehran’s nuclear weapons program, but to legalize it and protect it under the umbrella of an international agreement, backed by the United States. That all changed with Donald Trump. At last, an American president kept his word. He was very clear about it even before his second term started: Iran can’t have a bomb. Trump wanted it to go peacefully, but he warned that if the Iranians didn’t agree to dismantle their program entirely, they’d be bombed. Maybe Israel would do it, maybe the United States, maybe both, but in any case, they’d be bombed. Trump gave them 60 days to decide, and on day 61, Israel unleashed Operation Rising Lion. Until this morning, when Trump posted on Truth Social to take credit for the raid, there was some confusion about the administration’s involvement. As the operation began, Secretary of State Marco Rubio released a statement claiming that it was solely an Israeli show without any American participation. But even if details about intelligence sharing and other aspects of Israeli-U.S. coordination were hazy, the statement was obviously misleading: The entire operation was keyed to Trump. Without him, the attack wouldn’t have happened as it did, or maybe not at all. Trump spent two months neutralizing the Iranians without them realizing he was drawing them into the briar patch. Iranian diplomats pride themselves on their negotiating skills. Generations of U.S. diplomats have marveled at the Iranians’ ability to wipe the floor with them: It’s a cultural thing—ever try to bargain with a carpet merchant in Tehran? And Trump also praised them repeatedly for their talents—very good negotiators! The Iranians were in their sweet spot and must have imagined they could negotiate until Trump gave in to their demands or left office. But Trump was the trickster. He tied them down for two months, time that he gave to the Israelis to make sure they had everything in order. There’s already lots of talk about Trump’s deception campaign, and in the days and weeks to come, we’ll have more insight into which statements were real and which were faked and which journalists were used, without them knowing it, to print fake news to ensure the operation’s success. One Tablet colleague says it’s the most impressive operational feint since the Normandy invasion. Maybe even more impressive. A few weeks ago, a colleague told me of a brief conversation with a very senior Israeli official who said that Jerusalem and Washington see eye to eye on Gaza and left it at that. As my colleague saw it, and was meant to see it, this was not good news insofar as it suggested a big gap between the two powers on Iran. The deception campaign was so tight, it meant misleading friends casually. It’s now clear that the insanely dense communications environment—including foreign actors like the Iranians themselves, anti-Bibi Israeli journalists, the Gulf states, and the Europeans—served the purpose of the deception campaign. But most significant was the domestic component. Did the Iranians believe reports that the pro-Israel camp was losing influence with Trump and that the “restraintists” were on the rise? Did Iran lobbyist Trita Parsi tell officials in Tehran that his colleagues from the Quincy Institute and other Koch-funded policy experts who were working in the administration had it in the bag? Don’t worry about the neocons—my guys are steering things in a good way. It seems that, like the Iranians, the Koch network got caught in its own echo chamber. Will Rising Lion really split MAGA, as some MAGA influencers are warning? Polls say no. According to a recent Rasmussen poll, 84 percent of likely voters believe Iran cannot have a bomb. Only 9 percent disagree. More Americans think it’s OK for men to play in women’s sports, 21 percent, than those who think Iran should have a bomb. According to the Rasmussen poll, 57 percent favor military action to stop Iran from getting nukes—which means there are Kamala Harris voters, 50 percent of them, along with 73 percent of Trump’s base, who are fine with bombing Iran to stop the mullahs’ nuclear weapons program. A Harvard/Harris poll shows 60 percent support for Israel “to take out Iran’s nuclear weapons program,” with 78 percent support among Republicans. Who thinks it’s reasonable for Iran to have a bomb? In a lengthy X post attacking Mark Levin and others who think an Iranian bomb is bad for America, Tucker Carlson made the case for the Iranian bomb. Iran, he wrote, “knows it’s unwise to give up its weapons program entirely. Muammar Gaddafi tried that and wound up sodomized with a bayonet. As soon as Gaddafi disarmed, NATO killed him. Iran’s leaders saw that happen. They learned the obvious lesson.” The Iranians definitely want a bomb to defend themselves against the United States—NATO, if you prefer—but that’s hardly America First. The threat that an Iranian bomb poses to the United States isn’t really that the Iranians will launch missiles at U.S. cities—not yet, anyway—but that it gives the regime a nuclear shield. It’s bad for America if a nuclear Iran closes down the Straits of Hormuz to set the price for global energy markets. It’s bad for America if a nuclear Iran wages terror attacks on American soil, as it has plotted to kill Trump. An Iranian bomb forces American policymakers, including Trump, to reconfigure policies and priorities to suit the interests of a terror state. It’s fair to argue that your country shouldn’t attack Iran to prevent it from getting a bomb, but reasoning that a terror state that has been killing Americans for nearly half a century needs the bomb to protect itself from the country you live in is nuts. Maybe some Trump supporters are angry and confused because Trump was advertised as the peace candidate. But “no new wars” is a slogan, not a policy. The purpose of U.S. policy is to advance America’s peace and prosperity, and Trump was chosen to change the course of American leadership habituated to confusing U.S. interests with everyone else’s. For years now, the U.S. political establishment has congratulated itself for helping to lift half a billion Chinese peasants out of poverty—in exchange for the impoverishment of the American middle class. George W. Bush wasted young American lives trying to make Iraq and Afghanistan function like America. Obama committed the United States to climate agreements that were designed to make Americans poorer. He legalized Iran’s bomb. So has Operation Rising Lion enhanced America’s peace? If it ends Iran’s nuclear weapons programs, the answer is absolutely yes. Further, when American partners advance U.S. interests, it adds luster to American glory. For instance, in 1982, in what is now popularly known as the Bekaa Valley Turkey Shoot, Israeli pilots shot down more than 80 Soviet-made Syrian jets and destroyed dozens of Soviet-built surface-to-air missile systems. It was a crucial Cold War exhibition that showed U.S. arms and allies were superior to what Moscow could put in the field. Israel’s attacks on Iran have not only disabled a Russian and Chinese partner but also demonstrated American superiority to those watching in Moscow and Beijing. Plus, virtually all of Iran’s oil exports go to China. With the attack last night, Trump brought an end to a particularly demoralizing and dispiriting era in U.S. history, which began nearly 50 years ago with the hostage crisis. In that time, U.S. leadership has routinely appeased a terror regime sustained only by maniacal hatred of America, while U.S. elites from the worlds of policy and academia, media and culture, have adopted the style and language of perfumed third-world obscurantists. All it took was for an American president to keep his word.

Jun 15, 2025
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Fact Check: On June 14, 2023, millions of Americans protested in about 2,000 communities against President Trump's assertion of unprecedented presidential powers.
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Fact Check: On June 14, 2023, millions of Americans protested in about 2,000 communities against President Trump's assertion of unprecedented presidential powers.

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Fact Check: La tasa de pobreza en la Argentina habría estado por debajo de 37% en el segundo semestre del año pasado. De confirmarse el dato, sería una caída importante con relación al 52,9% al que llegó la medición en la primera parte de 2024. El próximo 31 de marzo, el Indec dará a conocer el dato oficial, pero las proyecciones de la Universidad Torcuato Di Tella (UTDT) muestran que la tasa estaría en torno al 36,8%. De esta forma, sería el nivel más bajo desde el primer semestre de 2022 (36,5%). El presidente Javier Milei mencionó esta estimación hoy en una entrevista cuando dijo que la economía está creciendo fuertemente y que la inflación está cayendo. “La pobreza en la frecuencia mensual, medida por Martín González Rozada de la Universidad Di Tella, muestra que la bajamos de 57% a 36%; es decir, bajamos 21 puntos la pobreza y sacamos a casi 10 millones de personas de la pobreza. En ese contexto, donde sigue bajando la inflación, siguen subiendo los salarios reales y las jubilaciones, donde a la gente le va muchísimo mejor, estamos en niveles de popularidad récord y tenemos intención de votos del orden del entre el 45% y el 50%“, dijo el mandatario, en una entrevista con A24. El econometrista González Rozada utiliza los microdatos de la encuesta permanente de hogares (EPH) que publica el Indec para anticipar el dato semestral de pobreza. Según sus estimaciones, la tasa de pobreza habría bajado de 41,8% del segundo semestre de 2023 a 36,8% en el mismo período del año pasado, mientras que la indigencia habría bajado de 12,2% a 9,2%. De esta forma, en su primer año de gobierno, Milei habría reducido la tasa de pobreza, pese al ajuste fiscal de casi cinco puntos del producto que realizó. El pico de la medición de pobreza fue en el primer trimestre, con una tasa de 54,8%, que habría bajado a 34,8% en el último trimestre del año. La baja tan pronunciada se explica directamente por la fuerte caída de la tasa de inflación, que pasó de 211,4% a finales de 2023 a 117,8%, el año pasado. Esto, a su vez, permitió que mejorara el poder adquisitivo vinculado a la compra de los productos que integran la canasta básica total (CBT), que mide la pobreza y que en 2024 aumentó 106,6%, y la canasta básica alimentaria (CBA), que mide la indigencia y subió 86,7% anual. “La tasa de pobreza se reduce porque a partir del semestre febrero-julio, los ingresos de los hogares empezaron a crecer más que los precios de la canasta básica total, que mide la pobreza. Este crecimiento de los ingresos se da en parte por la caída de la tasa de inflación”, dijo González Rozada, a LA NACION. El economista estima que mientras que la inflación siga bajando, seguirá cayendo la pobreza. “La evolución de la inflación esperada por el consenso del mercado es de 2,3% para enero y estimo que la CBT esté por debajo de ese valor en aumentos porcentuales similares a los que hubo en noviembre [1,5%] y diciembre [2,3%]. Por lo tanto, esperaría que la pobreza siga bajando, tal vez no al ritmo que ha bajado entre el primer y segundo semestre de año pasado, pero que se mantenga o siga bajando un poquito”, dijo González Rozada. Las estimaciones coinciden con las realizadas por el economista Leopoldo Tornarolli, investigador senior del Centro de Estudios Distributivos, Laborales y Sociales (Cedlas), que depende de la Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP). “La inflación es el fenómeno que explica en los últimos años la evolución de la pobreza monetaria, que es como se llama la medición de la pobreza argentina, que es por ingresos. Este método es muy sensible a la variación de la inflación. Si el Gobierno lograba desacelerar la inflación, iba a haber una caída en la pobreza. Quizás no se esperaba una caída de esa magnitud”, dijo en una entrevista con este medio. El Gobierno, además, en el último año aumentó las transferencias destinadas a la asignación universal por hijo (AUH) y a la tarjeta Alimentar, que ayudó a disminuir la tasa de indigencia. Fue el único gasto del Estado que creció en 2024 por encima de la inflación. Según los últimos datos disponibles del Indec, una familia tipo (dos adultos y dos menores) necesitó ganar en diciembre más de un millón de pesos para no ser pobre ($1.024.435), mientras que necesitó ingresos por $449.314 para no ser indigente. “El Gobierno trató de preservar el poder adquisitivo de los ingresos sociales, inclusive de incrementarlos, tal vez porque era consciente del impacto tan fuerte que iba a tener las medidas iniciales de estabilización y devaluación. Eso tuvo algún impacto, aunque no creo que sea la explicación principal para los números de pobreza. Si vemos los ingresos de los hogares que viven cerca de la línea de la pobreza, los que son menos pobres entre los pobres y los que son más pobres entre los no pobres, siguen teniendo principalmente ingresos laborales”, dijo Tornarolli. En cuanto a los datos oficiales de pobreza, el Indec informó en septiembre que en el primer semestre, la cantidad de personas pobres, si se proyectan los datos oficiales a todos el país, fue casi 25 millones, mientras que la indigencia alcanzó a 8,5 millones personas.

Detailed fact-check analysis of: La tasa de pobreza en la Argentina habría estado por debajo de 37% en el segundo semestre del año pasado. De confirmarse el dato, sería una caída importante con relación al 52,9% al que llegó la medición en la primera parte de 2024. El próximo 31 de marzo, el Indec dará a conocer el dato oficial, pero las proyecciones de la Universidad Torcuato Di Tella (UTDT) muestran que la tasa estaría en torno al 36,8%. De esta forma, sería el nivel más bajo desde el primer semestre de 2022 (36,5%). El presidente Javier Milei mencionó esta estimación hoy en una entrevista cuando dijo que la economía está creciendo fuertemente y que la inflación está cayendo. “La pobreza en la frecuencia mensual, medida por Martín González Rozada de la Universidad Di Tella, muestra que la bajamos de 57% a 36%; es decir, bajamos 21 puntos la pobreza y sacamos a casi 10 millones de personas de la pobreza. En ese contexto, donde sigue bajando la inflación, siguen subiendo los salarios reales y las jubilaciones, donde a la gente le va muchísimo mejor, estamos en niveles de popularidad récord y tenemos intención de votos del orden del entre el 45% y el 50%“, dijo el mandatario, en una entrevista con A24. El econometrista González Rozada utiliza los microdatos de la encuesta permanente de hogares (EPH) que publica el Indec para anticipar el dato semestral de pobreza. Según sus estimaciones, la tasa de pobreza habría bajado de 41,8% del segundo semestre de 2023 a 36,8% en el mismo período del año pasado, mientras que la indigencia habría bajado de 12,2% a 9,2%. De esta forma, en su primer año de gobierno, Milei habría reducido la tasa de pobreza, pese al ajuste fiscal de casi cinco puntos del producto que realizó. El pico de la medición de pobreza fue en el primer trimestre, con una tasa de 54,8%, que habría bajado a 34,8% en el último trimestre del año. La baja tan pronunciada se explica directamente por la fuerte caída de la tasa de inflación, que pasó de 211,4% a finales de 2023 a 117,8%, el año pasado. Esto, a su vez, permitió que mejorara el poder adquisitivo vinculado a la compra de los productos que integran la canasta básica total (CBT), que mide la pobreza y que en 2024 aumentó 106,6%, y la canasta básica alimentaria (CBA), que mide la indigencia y subió 86,7% anual. “La tasa de pobreza se reduce porque a partir del semestre febrero-julio, los ingresos de los hogares empezaron a crecer más que los precios de la canasta básica total, que mide la pobreza. Este crecimiento de los ingresos se da en parte por la caída de la tasa de inflación”, dijo González Rozada, a LA NACION. El economista estima que mientras que la inflación siga bajando, seguirá cayendo la pobreza. “La evolución de la inflación esperada por el consenso del mercado es de 2,3% para enero y estimo que la CBT esté por debajo de ese valor en aumentos porcentuales similares a los que hubo en noviembre [1,5%] y diciembre [2,3%]. Por lo tanto, esperaría que la pobreza siga bajando, tal vez no al ritmo que ha bajado entre el primer y segundo semestre de año pasado, pero que se mantenga o siga bajando un poquito”, dijo González Rozada. Las estimaciones coinciden con las realizadas por el economista Leopoldo Tornarolli, investigador senior del Centro de Estudios Distributivos, Laborales y Sociales (Cedlas), que depende de la Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP). “La inflación es el fenómeno que explica en los últimos años la evolución de la pobreza monetaria, que es como se llama la medición de la pobreza argentina, que es por ingresos. Este método es muy sensible a la variación de la inflación. Si el Gobierno lograba desacelerar la inflación, iba a haber una caída en la pobreza. Quizás no se esperaba una caída de esa magnitud”, dijo en una entrevista con este medio. El Gobierno, además, en el último año aumentó las transferencias destinadas a la asignación universal por hijo (AUH) y a la tarjeta Alimentar, que ayudó a disminuir la tasa de indigencia. Fue el único gasto del Estado que creció en 2024 por encima de la inflación. Según los últimos datos disponibles del Indec, una familia tipo (dos adultos y dos menores) necesitó ganar en diciembre más de un millón de pesos para no ser pobre ($1.024.435), mientras que necesitó ingresos por $449.314 para no ser indigente. “El Gobierno trató de preservar el poder adquisitivo de los ingresos sociales, inclusive de incrementarlos, tal vez porque era consciente del impacto tan fuerte que iba a tener las medidas iniciales de estabilización y devaluación. Eso tuvo algún impacto, aunque no creo que sea la explicación principal para los números de pobreza. Si vemos los ingresos de los hogares que viven cerca de la línea de la pobreza, los que son menos pobres entre los pobres y los que son más pobres entre los no pobres, siguen teniendo principalmente ingresos laborales”, dijo Tornarolli. En cuanto a los datos oficiales de pobreza, el Indec informó en septiembre que en el primer semestre, la cantidad de personas pobres, si se proyectan los datos oficiales a todos el país, fue casi 25 millones, mientras que la indigencia alcanzó a 8,5 millones personas.

Mar 11, 2025
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Fact Check: Pete Buttigieg, the former U.S. Secretary of Transportation, urged Americans to raise their voices against what he described as Trump's authoritarianism.
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Fact Check: Pete Buttigieg, the former U.S. Secretary of Transportation, urged Americans to raise their voices against what he described as Trump's authoritarianism.

Detailed fact-check analysis of: Pete Buttigieg, the former U.S. Secretary of Transportation, urged Americans to raise their voices against what he described as Trump's authoritarianism.

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Fact Check: Governor J.B. Pritzker called for fellow governors and Americans to stand up against Donald Trump's authoritarian ambitions during a discussion with Jen Psaki.
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Fact Check: Governor J.B. Pritzker called for fellow governors and Americans to stand up against Donald Trump's authoritarian ambitions during a discussion with Jen Psaki.

Detailed fact-check analysis of: Governor J.B. Pritzker called for fellow governors and Americans to stand up against Donald Trump's authoritarian ambitions during a discussion with Jen Psaki.

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Fact Check: 51% of Americans approve of President Trump's handling of immigration and border security, while 49% disapprove, indicating a closely divided public opinion on this issue.
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Fact Check: 51% of Americans approve of President Trump's handling of immigration and border security, while 49% disapprove, indicating a closely divided public opinion on this issue.

Detailed fact-check analysis of: 51% of Americans approve of President Trump's handling of immigration and border security, while 49% disapprove, indicating a closely divided public opinion on this issue.

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Fact Check: 44% of Americans rated Elon Musk's efforts with DOGE to reduce spending and the size of the federal government as a success or partial success, down from 47% in April 2023. | TruthOrFake Blog