BOGOTA, Colombia — Colombia's president on Tuesday reduced wages for members of Congress by approximately 30%, as the South American nation faces a budget crunch and gets ready to hold elections in the first semester of this year.
Congress members in Colombia earned approximately $13,000 a month last year, an amount that was about 32 times greater than the nation's minimum wage.
The vast disparity in the earnings of legislators and average Colombians has often come under scrutiny in the South American country, with some members of Congress in recent years proposing bills to reduce their own wages.
But those initiatives have failed multiple times, and have been blocked by legislators who have argued that they need high wages for myriad reasons, that include investing their savings into future political campaigns.
With a decree issued on Tuesday, Colombian President Gustavo Petro eliminated a portion of the wages of Congress members known as the ''bonus for special services'' that was introduced over a decade ago to help cover relocation costs for members of Congress.
Without this bonus, wages received by Colombia's pampered legislators will drop to about $9,400 a month, in a country where most workers earn monthly wages of about $500 or less.
In its decree Tuesday, Colombia's government said that wages currently received by legislators are ''disproportionate in relation to the average income of the (nation's) population and the country's economic reality.''
''Austerity measures are necessary to the extent that they don't affect the fundamental rights of citizens'' the decree said.