Recent surveys indicate declining public support for economic adjustments in Argentina, with widespread feelings of concern, anger, sadness, uncertainty, and fear among citizens. According to the latest national report by Delfos, only 25% of voters believe the current sacrifices are worth it for future improvements, while nearly 70% disagree, creating a negative balance of 42 percentage points. Similar findings were reported by Equipo Mide, showing 46% pessimism versus 24% optimism regarding the economic measures. The survey also highlights that pessimism dominates across all socioeconomic levels, particularly among supporters of former President Sergio Massa and Myriam Bregman, where negativity exceeds 85%. Optimism remains non-majoritarian except among voters of Javier Milei, who show 48% optimism. According to Qsocial, 34% agree the current sacrifice will pay off, compared to 62% who disagree, aligning with the hard-core support base of La Libertad Avanza. Lastly, Hugo Haime & Asociados' study reveals that 45% never supported Milei’s adjustment, corresponding to those who voted for Unión por la Patria in the 2023 runoff election.
Bias read (Center): The article presents survey data and analysis without overtly favoring any political side. It reports on public sentiment toward economic policies without taking a stance or using biased language. The framing is neutral, focusing on statistical trends and cross-referencing multiple polls to providea




