Ministry of Labour, Employment and Social Security (Argentina)
The Ministry of Labour, Employment and Social Security (Spanish: Ministerio de Trabajo, Empleo y Seguridad Social; MTEySS) is a ministry of the Argentine Government tasked with overseeing the country's public policies on labour conditions, employment and social security.
Ministerio de Trabajo, Empleo y Seguridad Social | |
Edificio CASFPI, headquarters of the Ministry | |
Ministry overview | |
---|---|
Formed | 1949 |
Preceding Ministry | |
Type | Ministry |
Jurisdiction | Argentina |
Headquarters | Edificio CASFPI, Av. Leandro N. Alem 650, Buenos Aires |
Annual budget | $ 3,693,758,343,111[1] |
Minister responsible | |
Parent department | Government of Argentina |
Website | argentina.gob.ar/trabajo |
It proposes, designs, elaborates, administers and supervises the policies in all that is inherent to the relations and individual and collective conditions of work, to the legal regime of collective bargaining and of the professional associations of workers and employers, to employment, job training and social security. In addition, it is informally tasked with overseeing the government's relationship with Argentina's trade unions.[2]
The Ministry was founded in 1949, when the Secretariat of Labour and Prevision was elevated to ministerial level in the first cabinet of President Juan Domingo Perón; the first minister was José María Freire.[3] It was briefly disestablished during the dictatorship of Juan Carlos Onganía, being restored during the third and last presidency of Perón in 1973. It was also demoted to a secretariat for a short period during the presidency of Mauricio Macri, from 2018 to 2019.[4] The current minister is Claudio Moroni, who has served since 10 December 2019 in the cabinet of President Alberto Fernández.[5]
List of ministers
No | Minister | Party | Term | President | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ministry of Labour and Prevision (1949–1958) | ||||||
1 | José María Freire | Peronist Party | 7 June 1949 – 6 April 1953 | Juan Domingo Perón | ||
2 | Alejandro Giavarini | Peronist Party | 6 April 1953 – 21 September 1955 | |||
3 | Luis Cerruti Costa | Independent | 21 September 1955 – 14 November 1955 | Eduardo Lonardi | ||
4 | Raúl Carlos Migone | Independent | 14 November 1955 – 21 September 1956 | Pedro Eugenio Aramburu | ||
5 | Horacio Aguirre Legarreta | National Democratic Party | 26 September 1956 – 16 November 1956 | |||
6 | Alberto Mercier | Independent | 17 November 1956 – 29 January 1957 | |||
7 | Tristán Guevara | Democratic Progressive Party | 30 January 1957 – 30 April 1958 | |||
Ministry of Labour and Social Security (1958–1966) | ||||||
8 | Alfredo Allende | Intransigent Radical Civic Union | 18 June 1958 – 11 February 1959 | Arturo Frondizi | ||
9 | David Bléjer | Intransigent Radical Civic Union | 11 February 1959 – 30 December 1960 | |||
10 | Guillermo Acuña Anzorena | Intransigent Radical Civic Union | 30 December 1960 – 30 June 1961 | |||
11 | Ismael Bruno Quijano | Intransigent Radical Civic Union | 30 June 1961 – 26 March 1962 | |||
12 | Oscar Puiggrós | Christian Democratic Party | 27 March 1962 – 29 April 1962 | José María Guido | ||
13 | Galileo Puente | Independent | 29 April 1962 – 28 February 1963 | |||
14 | Alberto Rodríguez Galán | Independent | 28 February 1963 – 11 March 1963 | |||
15 | Rodolfo Martelli | Independent | 12 March 1963 – 14 May 1963 | |||
16 | Bernardo Bas | Independent | 15 May 1963 – 11 October 1963 | |||
17 | Fernando Solá | Radical Civic Union | 12 October 1963 – 28 June 1966 | Arturo Illia | ||
Ministry of Labour (1971–1989) | ||||||
18 | Rubens San Sebastián | Independent | 30 May 1971 – 25 March 1973 | Alejandro Lanusse | ||
19 | Ricardo Otero | Justicialist Party | 25 March 1973 – 12 October 1973 | Héctor Cámpora | ||
12 October 1973 – 1 July 1974 | Juan Domingo Perón | |||||
1 July 1974 – 29 June 1975 | Isabel Perón | |||||
20 | Cecilio Conditi | Justicialist Party | 29 June 1975 – 11 August 1975 | |||
21 | Carlos Ruckauf | Justicialist Party | 11 August 1975 – 3 February 1976 | |||
22 | Miguel Unamuno | Justicialist Party | 3 February 1976 – 24 March 1976 | |||
23 | Horacio Tomás Liendo | Independent (Military) | 29 March 1976 – 8 February 1979 | Jorge Rafael Videla | ||
24 | Llamil Reston | Independent (Military) | 8 February 1979 – 29 March 1981 | |||
25 | Julio Porcile | Independent (Military) | 29 March 1981 – 2 July 1982 | Roberto Viola | ||
Carlos Lacoste | ||||||
Leopoldo Galtieri | ||||||
Alfredo Saint-Jean | ||||||
26 | Héctor Villaveirán | Independent | 2 July 1982 – 10 December 1983 | Reynaldo Bignone | ||
27 | Antonio Mucci | Radical Civic Union | 10 December 1983 – 24 April 1984 | Raúl Alfonsín | ||
28 | Juan Manuel Casella | Radical Civic Union | 24 April 1984 – 31 October 1984 | |||
29 | Hugo Barrionuevo | Justicialist Party | 31 October 1984 – 27 March 1987 | |||
30 | Carlos Alderete | Justicialist Party | 27 March 1987 – 16 September 1987 | |||
31 | Ideler Tonelli | Radical Civic Union | 16 September 1987 – 7 July 1989 | |||
Ministry of Labour and Social Security (1989–1999) | ||||||
32 | Jorge Alberto Triaca | Justicialist Party | 8 July 1989 – 16 January 1992 | Carlos Menem | ||
33 | Rodolfo Díaz | Justicialist Party | 16 January 1992 – 4 December 1992 | |||
34 | Enrique Rodríguez | Justicialist Party | 4 December 1992 – 22 December 1993 | |||
35 | Armando Caro Figueroa | Justicialist Party | 22 December 1993 – 5 December 1997 | |||
36 | Antonio Erman González | Christian Democratic Party | 5 December 1997 – 26 May 1999 | |||
37 | José Alberto Uriburu | Independent | 26 May 1999 – 10 December 1999 | |||
Ministry of Labour, Employment and Human Resources (2001–2002) | ||||||
38 | Alberto Flamarique | Radical Civic Union | 10 December 1999 – 6 October 2000 | Fernando de la Rúa | ||
39 | Patricia Bullrich | New Leadership | 6 October 2000 – 29 October 2001 | |||
40 | José Gabriel Dumón | Radical Civic Union | 29 October 2001 – 21 December 2001 | |||
41 | Oraldo Britos | Justicialist Party | 23 December 2001 – 30 December 2001 | Adolfo Rodríguez Saá | ||
Ministry of Labour, Employment and Social Security (2002–2018) | ||||||
42 | Alfredo Atanasof | Justicialist Party | 3 January 2002 – 3 May 2002 | Eduardo Duhalde | ||
43 | Graciela Camaño | Justicialist Party | 3 May 2002 – 25 May 2003 | |||
44 | Carlos Tomada | Justicialist Party | 25 May 2003 – 10 December 2015 | Néstor Kirchner | ||
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner | ||||||
45 | Jorge Triaca Jr. | Republican Proposal | 10 December 2015 – 5 September 2018 | Mauricio Macri | ||
Ministry of Production and Labour (2018–2019) | ||||||
46 | Dante Sica | Independent | 5 September 2018 – 10 December 2019 | Mauricio Macri | ||
Ministry of Labour, Employment and Social Security (2019–present) | ||||||
47 | Claudio Moroni | Justicialist Party | 10 December 2019 – incumbent | Alberto Fernández |
External links
- Official site (in Spanish)
References
- "Presupuesto 2021". Ministerio de Economía (in Spanish). 2020. Retrieved 20 November 2020.
- "¿Quién es Claudio Moroni, el flamante ministro de trabajo que deberá articular el pacto social?". InfoGremiales (in Spanish). 7 December 2019. Retrieved 24 November 2020.
- Luciani, María Paula (May 2014). El primer peronismo y la jerarquización de las agencias estatales del trabajo (1943-1955) (PDF) (MA) (in Spanish). National University of General San Martín. p. 136. Retrieved 24 November 2020.
- Aguilar, Lucho (3 September 2018). "Como Onganía, Macri rebajó el Ministerio de Trabajo a una secretaría (más) patronal". La Izquierda Diario (in Spanish). Retrieved 24 November 2020.
- "Quién es Claudio Moroni, el nuevo ministro de Trabajo". Página/12 (in Spanish). 7 December 2019. Retrieved 23 November 2020.