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Following Sri Lanka, Panama becomes next nation to collapse amid global recessionary pressures and unrelenting inflation
By JD Heyes // Jul 28, 2022

Panama is the latest country to implode due to rising inflation and recession, though the country's president is only making matters worse by imposing Marxist/socialist 'solutions.'

Brighteon.TV

According to reports, what started as a simple teacher's strike against the high price of gasoline has blossomed into the largest civil unrest in the country since the end of dictator Manuel Noriega's reign of terror in 1989.

Citizens have erected fiery roadblocks on major highways that, in turn, serve only to disrupt deliveries of food and other commodities, thereby worsening shortages. And while the Panamanian government has entered a new round of talks aimed at placating the masses and avoiding further destruction, already the damage has surpassed $500 million and counting, according to Voice of America.

The America 1st Twitter account noted in a post containing video clips of the violence and unrest, which includes smashing a police vehicle: "Panama is heating up (literally). They are protesting corruption and high prices."

President Laurentino Cortizo in June made two major moves in a bid to end the unrest, but what he did has actually worsened the situation, so the unrest has only spread.

On June 11, he ordered wider subsidies to include extending a freeze on gasoline prices to all consumers, limiting the price to $3.95 a gallon, or 24 percent lower than the price was by the end of June. In addition, he pledged more price caps on 10 basic food items including beef loin, pasta, vegetable oil and canned sardines.

But of course, artificially capping prices never works because it forces companies to take losses on their products, which in turn, either puts them out of business or forces them to produce less so that their losses are limited. Either way, both cause increased shortages and more unrest.

"With protestors demanding economy-wide price cuts and increased spending on education and health care, the demonstrations continued, not only in the form of marches and strikes but also roadblocks of major highways, including the internationally-critical Pan-American Highway. The Panama Canal has thus far escaped disruption; strikes by canal workers are illegal," Zero Hedge added.

Of course, blocking the crucial highway also only adds to shortages -- which then adds to anger and unrest, like a vicious circle.

In order to clear the blocked highway, Cortizo doubled down on a socialist solution, pledging to cap gasoline prices even further at $3.25 a gallon.

But even that isn't good enough.

On Monday, leaders of the National Alliance for the Rights of the People, or Anadepo, which is a coalition that is representing labor unions, civil organizations and indigenous people, announced that they would no longer honor their commitment to keep highways cleared, claiming that they made the deal with the president under duress. Some of the groups noted that they were not even represented during the talks.

As such, the Cortizo government agreed to return to negotiations on Tuesday, with talks to be mediated by the Catholic Archbishop of Panama. Still, the leader of a semi-autonomous region in the country has already stated flatly that any gas price over $3 a gallon is "non-negotiable."

But in addition to gas prices and the shortages of commodities, Panamanians are also sick of the graft and corruption. In response to those demands, Cortizo ordered that government institutions would begin trimming payroll by 10 percent while cutting agency budgets and restricting foreign travel.

Still, none of these efforts may be enough to stave off a full-blown revolution "against a government seen as living well on the backs of common people," Zero Hedge reported, adding: "Earlier, members of the ruling Democratic Revolutionary Party threw fuel on the fire when photos captured them drinking $340 bottles of Macallan whisky while celebrating the start of a new legislative session."

Ecuador is also experiencing similar problems and may be the next domino to fall in the American hemisphere.

Sources include:

ZeroHedge.com

VOANews.com



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