Diesel Subsidy Cut Sparks Ecuador's Nationwide Indigenous Strike
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Ecuador stunned its own citizens on September 12 by hiking diesel from $1.80 to $2.80 per gallon.
The sudden end to a subsidy that once cost over $1 billion a year ignited an“immediate and indefinite” national strike led by Conaie, the Indigenous confederation representing 16 nationalities.
Conaie argues that higher fuel costs will ripple through transport and food prices, hitting rural and low-income families hardest. President Daniel Noboa responded by declaring a 60-day state of emergency in seven provinces and ordering security forces to clear roadblocks.
He vowed legal penalties for violence or illegal blockades while promising assistance packages-monthly transfers of $400–$1 000 for transport workers and targeted social aid-to soften the impact.
Behind these events lies a broader struggle between fiscal necessity and social welfare. Ecuador 's budget shortfalls made the diesel subsidy unsustainable amid rampant fuel smuggling and illegal mining.
Yet abrupt removal without gradual transition risks sparking unrest and undermining fragile livelihoods. Past Conaie-led protests in 2019 and 2022 cost the economy some $1.1 billion in losses-about equal to the subsidy's annual price tag-showing Indigenous power to sway national policy.
This conflict now tests whether Noboa can balance budget discipline with social stability, a dilemma familiar to governments worldwide moving away from costly fuel support.
The sudden end to a subsidy that once cost over $1 billion a year ignited an“immediate and indefinite” national strike led by Conaie, the Indigenous confederation representing 16 nationalities.
Conaie argues that higher fuel costs will ripple through transport and food prices, hitting rural and low-income families hardest. President Daniel Noboa responded by declaring a 60-day state of emergency in seven provinces and ordering security forces to clear roadblocks.
He vowed legal penalties for violence or illegal blockades while promising assistance packages-monthly transfers of $400–$1 000 for transport workers and targeted social aid-to soften the impact.
Behind these events lies a broader struggle between fiscal necessity and social welfare. Ecuador 's budget shortfalls made the diesel subsidy unsustainable amid rampant fuel smuggling and illegal mining.
Yet abrupt removal without gradual transition risks sparking unrest and undermining fragile livelihoods. Past Conaie-led protests in 2019 and 2022 cost the economy some $1.1 billion in losses-about equal to the subsidy's annual price tag-showing Indigenous power to sway national policy.
This conflict now tests whether Noboa can balance budget discipline with social stability, a dilemma familiar to governments worldwide moving away from costly fuel support.

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.
Most popular stories
Market Research

- Motif AI Enters Phase Two Of Its Growth Cycle
- 1Inch Unlocks Access To Tokenized Rwas Via Swap API
- Kucoin Presents Kumining: Embodying Simple Mining, Smart Gains For Effortless Crypto Accumulation
- With Seal, Walrus Becomes The First Decentralized Data Platform With Access Controls
- Jpmorgan Product Head Joins GSR Trading MD To Build Institutional Staking Markets
- Innovation-Driven The5ers Selects Ctrader As Premier Platform For Advanced Traders
Comments
No comment