Leftist Boric wins Chile presidency pledging economic overhaul

Mr Gabriel Boric won 55 per cent of the vote with 69 per cent of votes counted. PHOTO: AFP

SANTIAGO (BLOOMBERG) - Leftist Gabriel Boric was elected president of Chile on Sunday (Dec 19) vowing higher taxes, greener industries and greater equality, after tapping into discontent over an investor-friendly economy that has left many behind.

With 69 per cent of votes counted, the former student protest leader won 55 per cent of the vote, a larger margin than forecast, above conservative rival Jose Antonio Kast with 45 per cent, electoral body Servel reported.

Mr Kast conceded in a tweet congratulating his rival.

Mr Boric, 35, will take office in March as one of the youngest presidents in the world and an ambitious agenda.

His victory paves the way not only for a generational shift but also for the biggest economic changes in decades for one of Latin America's richest countries, a global financial market favourite.

He came out on top after a highly polarised campaign that only moderated in the final stretch as both contenders wooed centrists.

He will face enormous challenges including a divided Congress, plunging economic growth, the writing of a new constitution and the lingering threat of social unrest.

Mr Boric describes himself as a moderate socialist who shuns the hard left models of Cuba and Venezuela.

Mr Kast and his supporters did not believe that and, pointing to Mr Boric's alliance with the communist party, lamented that their country, famed for years of intense economic growth after neo-liberal policy shifts, would face disaster if he won.

Similarly, Mr Boric's supporters saw Mr Kast as a dangerous throwback to the right-wing dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet because of Mr Kast's emphasis on public order, conservative social mores and fighting immigration.

Mr Boric, who is unmarried, bearded and tattooed, first gained prominence a decade ago when he led nationwide demonstrations calling for free and high-quality education.

He ran successfully for lower house deputy in 2013 and was reelected to a second term in a landslide vote.

His emphasis on social justice dovetailed with a period of unrest that exploded over a transit fare hike in 2019 and quickly ballooned into a broader movement demanding better healthcare, public transport and pensions.

During the presidential campaign, Mr Boric often vowed that, "if Chile was the birthplace of neo-liberalism, it will also be its grave".

When he voted in his native Patagonian hometown of Punta Arenas on Sunday, he said he represented "a new generation that is entering politics with clean hands, a warm heart and a cool head".

Mr Boric wants to dismantle some pillars of Chile's economy such as its private pension funds, which form the bedrock of the local capital markets.

He backs higher taxes on both the rich and the nation's crucial mining industry - Chile is the world's biggest copper producer - while also promising to keep government debt in-check.

Mr Kast criticised Mr Boric for being soft on crime, changing views on key issues and backing a fourth round of early pension fund withdrawals that spooked investors.

Questions have also been raised about Mr Boric's inexperience and youth.

In March, Mr Boric will take the helm of a nation that's facing unprecedented political upheaval.

Social unrest kicked off the process of drafting a new constitution, now being done by a left-leaning assembly, which will be put to a national referendum next year.

He will have to contend with economic growth that will come to a halt, slowing from a record high near 12 per cent this year to a rate closer to 2 per cent, according to the central bank.

Policy makers are also raising the interest rates to tame soaring inflation and, while Chile still has relatively sound fiscal accounts, the debt-to-gross domestic product ratio has increased quickly amid pandemic spending.

Regionally, Chile's election follows the triumph of Mr Pedro Castillo in Peru earlier this year, and stands to add momentum to leftist candidates in Colombia and Brazil, which will hold presidential elections next year.

Similarly to Chile, both of those countries are facing increasingly polarised politics.

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