Uruguayan President José Mujica, has
earned the nickname of the “poorest,” or the “most generous,” president in the
world
Usually presidents are not
associated with poverty. Some, like Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, are even
linked to big spending and generous welfare programs.
But the President of Uruguay, José
Mujica, has earned the nickname of the “poorest,” or the “most generous,”
president in the world — depending on how you see things— after revealing that
he donates 90 percent of his earnings, to charitable causes.
In a recent interview, Mujica told
Spain’s El Mundo that he earns
a salary of $12,500 a month, but only keeps $1,250 for himself, donating the
rest to charity.
The president said that the only big
item he owns is his VW car, valued at $1,945
dollars. The farmhouse in which he lives in Montevideo is under his wife’s
name, Lucía Topolansky, a Senator, who also donates part of her salary.
“I do fine with that amount; I have
to do fine because there are many Uruguayans who live with much less,” the
president told El Mundo.
The 77-year-old Mujica is a
former guerilla leader, who fought against Uruguay’s military regimes in the
1970s. He was also Minister of Livestock, Agriculture and Fisheries from 2005
to 2008 and afterwards, served as a senator.
Later on, as presidential candidate
for the Broad Front, the left-wing coalition, Mujica won the 2009 election becoming
Uruguay’s president on March 1, 2010.
Uruguay is the second smallest
nation in South America by area, after Suriname. However it is one of the most
developed countries on the continent, with a GDP per capita of $15,656. That’s
less than half of United States’ GDP per capita, but it triples earnings in
Honduras which has a GDP per capita of just $4,345.
Under Mujica’s stewardship, Uruguay
has become known for low levels of corruption. The South American country
ranks as the second least corrupt country in Latin America in Transparency
International’s global corruption index.
Uruguay also made it to the world
cup 2010 semi-finals while Mujica was in office, and the country won the South
American Soccer championships in 2011, stunning tournament hosts Argentina, in
a memorable performance by striker Diego Forlan.
It seems therefore, that it’s a good
time to be Jose Mujica.
Without bank accounts, and with few
debts, Mujica told El Mundo that he sleeps peacefully. When his term is
over, the President hopes to rest even more peacefully in his farmhouse, along
with his wife and his inseparable dog, Manuela.
(Photo: Flickr, presidenciaecuador)
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