The Uruguayan Executive confirmed that, in the Accountability Project it will send to Parliament, a direct reduction of budget credits allocated to travel expenses and catering services will be applied in all ministries.
The measure was announced by the Undersecretary of Economy and Finance, Martín Vallcorba, who explained that, beyond the “surgical” work carried out ministry by ministry during 2025 to meet fiscal targets (with an estimated reduction of 0.4% of GDP in unplanned spending), there will be “some signal and some concrete action” in these areas in the Accountability Project. “There will also be a general indication, no longer negotiated, but a clear signal of the need to reduce expenses in general terms,” he specified. Minister Gabriel Oddone supported the active spending management strategy to maintain fiscal sustainability without postponing priority expenditures in childhood, security, education, and homelessness.
The impact of citizen research
This decision did not come out of nowhere. It arrived after months of systematic exposure of expenses that many citizens considered excessive and unjustifiable.
The main drivers of this visibility were two researchers who operate under pseudonyms on social media: @PhDenLogica (PhD in Logic and Freedom) and Martín Fitzek. Both have developed meticulous and sustained work analyzing public data from the State Purchases portal and other official sources.
@PhDenLogica, creator of the platforms ControlCiudadano.uy and GastosUy, documented that the Uruguayan state spent almost 20 million dollars on catering services in the last ten years (only what was reported; the actual figure is surely higher). In a single recent week, more than 1.176 million pesos were recorded in this category. Fitzek, for his part, has published dozens of specific cases of travel expenses and tickets.
Both researchers have regularly collaborated with the team of La Derecha Diario (Uruguay section), which amplified these findings with articles, rankings, and breakdowns that reached thousands of readers. Thanks to that combination of hard data, clear visualizations, and mass dissemination, what previously went almost unnoticed in budgets became a topic of public debate.
A necessary step, but clearly insufficient
“The bullet has entered,” as they say in the jargon when a complaint truly impacts. This time, the bullet was precise, public, and persistent information. And the government was forced to respond.
However, this cut in travel expenses and catering, although welcome thanks to the work of PhDenLogica and Martín Fitzek, is clearly insufficient. The leftist government cannot limit itself to only touching these visible areas while keeping an elephantine state intact, with deficit-ridden public companies, oversized bureaucratic structures, and multiple areas of spending that remain untouched.
Uruguay needs much more than targeted cuts: it is urgent to advance in real privatizations of inefficient state companies and in deep structural cuts in other public spending items. Only then can the burden on taxpayers truly be alleviated and resources freed for what really matters.
For now, citizens already have a concrete fact: when numbers are exposed without filters, public spending begins to adjust. And that, in Uruguay, is still news. But the leftist government must understand that this is just a first step; the real and necessary adjustment is just beginning.