No Hay Plata

2023Catchphrase / political memesemi-active

Also known as: There Is No Money

No Hay Plata is a 2023 political catchphrase meme from Argentine President Javier Milei's December inaugural address declaring "there is no money," spawning viral cumbia remixes, Twitter memes, and reaction videos across social media.

"No Hay Plata" ("There Is No Money") is a catchphrase from Argentine President Javier Milei's inaugural address on December 10, 2023, where he bluntly told supporters that the country's coffers were empty1. The phrase immediately exploded across Twitter/X and WhatsApp as both a political talking point and meme fodder, spawning reaction videos, cumbia remixes, and image macros about Argentina's economic crisis3.

TL;DR

"No Hay Plata" ("There Is No Money") is a catchphrase from Argentine President Javier Milei's inaugural address on December 10, 2023, where he bluntly told supporters that the country's coffers were empty.

Overview

"No Hay Plata" comes from Milei's first official speech as Argentina's president, delivered to supporters gathered outside Congress. In the speech, Milei laid out the country's dire fiscal situation and argued that gradual reform was impossible because "there is no money" to fund it. The line landed hard because it was the opposite of what politicians typically say at inaugurations. Instead of grand promises, Milei gave a blunt financial diagnosis, and his crowd actually cheered1.

The phrase works as a meme because of its stark simplicity. Four words that sum up an entire economic crisis. Online, people applied it to everything from personal budgets to absurd hypotheticals, using Milei's delivery as a reaction clip or pairing the quote with relatable images about being broke3.

On December 10, 2023, Javier Milei was inaugurated as Argentina's president. During his address to supporters outside Congress, he explained that gradual economic reform wasn't possible because "para hacer gradualismo, es necesario que haya financiamiento y lamentablemente... no hay plata" ("to do gradualism, you need financing and unfortunately... there is no money")2. The moment was broadcast live and quickly clipped by news outlets. LibertadDigital uploaded the segment to YouTube, where it picked up over 36,000 views and 903 likes within a single day3.

What made the moment unusual was the crowd's reaction. Milei's supporters applauded him for delivering bad news. As Econlib contributor Marcos Falcone noted, it was likely the first time a newly elected president was cheered for telling constituents such a bitter economic truth1. Milei framed the crisis as the result of "irresponsible fiscal and monetary policies" by the previous left-wing government and promised that the public sector, not taxpayers, would bear the cost of adjustment1.

Origin & Background

Platform
Live television broadcast (inaugural speech), Twitter/X (viral spread)
Key People
Javier Milei
Date
2023
Year
2023

On December 10, 2023, Javier Milei was inaugurated as Argentina's president. During his address to supporters outside Congress, he explained that gradual economic reform wasn't possible because "para hacer gradualismo, es necesario que haya financiamiento y lamentablemente... no hay plata" ("to do gradualism, you need financing and unfortunately... there is no money"). The moment was broadcast live and quickly clipped by news outlets. LibertadDigital uploaded the segment to YouTube, where it picked up over 36,000 views and 903 likes within a single day.

What made the moment unusual was the crowd's reaction. Milei's supporters applauded him for delivering bad news. As Econlib contributor Marcos Falcone noted, it was likely the first time a newly elected president was cheered for telling constituents such a bitter economic truth. Milei framed the crisis as the result of "irresponsible fiscal and monetary policies" by the previous left-wing government and promised that the public sector, not taxpayers, would bear the cost of adjustment.

How It Spread

The phrase caught fire on Twitter/X within hours of the speech. On December 10, 2023, X user @soyunargento posted a video of Milei's supporters reacting to the "no hay plata" line in real time. The clip pulled in over 908,000 views and 30,000 likes in its first day. That same day, X user @pia_dmn uploaded a video of women dancing in response to the quote, which hit 78,000 views and 4,900 likes in 24 hours.

The meme didn't stay on Twitter. On WhatsApp, an audio clip of Milei's speech got remixed into a cumbia track that spread rapidly through group chats across Argentina. The song sampled Milei's delivery of the "no hay plata" line and set it to a danceable beat. According to Argentine media outlet Mejor Informado, many predicted the cumbia would be one of the most-played songs at holiday parties that December.

The meme straddled a line between genuine political commentary and dark humor. For Milei's supporters, "no hay plata" was a vindication: proof that their candidate was honest about the mess he inherited. For critics, it was gallows humor about a president openly admitting the country was broke. Both camps made memes.

How to Use This Meme

"No hay plata" typically gets deployed in a few ways:

- Reaction clip: Share the video of Milei saying the line when someone suggests an expensive plan, purchase, or policy. Works for both political and personal finance contexts. - Image macro: Pair a still of Milei speaking with the caption "No hay plata" over situations where money is needed but absent. Common setups include payday vs. end-of-month comparisons. - Audio remix: The cumbia version gets shared in group chats and used as a soundtrack for short-form videos about financial struggles. - Text-only: Simply typing "no hay plata" as a reply to any post about spending, budgets, or economic plans. The phrase works on its own as shorthand for "we're broke."

Cultural Impact

Milei's speech was unprecedented for an inaugural address. Rather than making crowd-pleasing promises, he quoted libertarian economists like Jesús Huerta de Soto and Alberto Benegas Lynch, and praised 19th-century President Julio Argentino Roca, a figure who had been criticized by the left in recent years. The speech also included a significant foreign policy shift: Argentina's new Minister of Foreign Affairs announced the country would immediately pursue OECD membership, reversing the previous administration's direction.

The "no hay plata" moment captured international attention partly because of how counterintuitive it was. A president being applauded for announcing austerity stood out against the backdrop of populist politics across Latin America. Former President Mauricio Macri attended the ceremony and said he "would not have made a single change" to Milei's speech. Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was also present, a notable contrast to the previous Argentine government's outreach to Russia.

In Argentina, the phrase entered everyday conversation as a shorthand response to any suggestion that required money. The cumbia remix turned what could have been pure anxiety into something people could dance to, following the Argentine saying "al mal tiempo, buena cara" ("put on a good face in bad times").

Fun Facts

Milei is the first self-described anarcho-capitalist to be elected head of state anywhere in the world.

The cumbia remix spread primarily through WhatsApp forwards before hitting other platforms, a distribution pattern common in Latin American viral content.

In his inaugural speech, Milei quoted the definition of classical liberalism as "the unrestricted respect for one's neighbor's life plan based on the non-aggression principle".

The speech's reception was unusual enough that Econlib published an analysis of its cultural significance the day after.

Frequently Asked Questions

No Hay Plata

2023Catchphrase / political memesemi-active

Also known as: There Is No Money

No Hay Plata is a 2023 political catchphrase meme from Argentine President Javier Milei's December inaugural address declaring "there is no money," spawning viral cumbia remixes, Twitter memes, and reaction videos across social media.

"No Hay Plata" ("There Is No Money") is a catchphrase from Argentine President Javier Milei's inaugural address on December 10, 2023, where he bluntly told supporters that the country's coffers were empty. The phrase immediately exploded across Twitter/X and WhatsApp as both a political talking point and meme fodder, spawning reaction videos, cumbia remixes, and image macros about Argentina's economic crisis.

TL;DR

"No Hay Plata" ("There Is No Money") is a catchphrase from Argentine President Javier Milei's inaugural address on December 10, 2023, where he bluntly told supporters that the country's coffers were empty.

Overview

"No Hay Plata" comes from Milei's first official speech as Argentina's president, delivered to supporters gathered outside Congress. In the speech, Milei laid out the country's dire fiscal situation and argued that gradual reform was impossible because "there is no money" to fund it. The line landed hard because it was the opposite of what politicians typically say at inaugurations. Instead of grand promises, Milei gave a blunt financial diagnosis, and his crowd actually cheered.

The phrase works as a meme because of its stark simplicity. Four words that sum up an entire economic crisis. Online, people applied it to everything from personal budgets to absurd hypotheticals, using Milei's delivery as a reaction clip or pairing the quote with relatable images about being broke.

On December 10, 2023, Javier Milei was inaugurated as Argentina's president. During his address to supporters outside Congress, he explained that gradual economic reform wasn't possible because "para hacer gradualismo, es necesario que haya financiamiento y lamentablemente... no hay plata" ("to do gradualism, you need financing and unfortunately... there is no money"). The moment was broadcast live and quickly clipped by news outlets. LibertadDigital uploaded the segment to YouTube, where it picked up over 36,000 views and 903 likes within a single day.

What made the moment unusual was the crowd's reaction. Milei's supporters applauded him for delivering bad news. As Econlib contributor Marcos Falcone noted, it was likely the first time a newly elected president was cheered for telling constituents such a bitter economic truth. Milei framed the crisis as the result of "irresponsible fiscal and monetary policies" by the previous left-wing government and promised that the public sector, not taxpayers, would bear the cost of adjustment.

Origin & Background

Platform
Live television broadcast (inaugural speech), Twitter/X (viral spread)
Key People
Javier Milei
Date
2023
Year
2023

On December 10, 2023, Javier Milei was inaugurated as Argentina's president. During his address to supporters outside Congress, he explained that gradual economic reform wasn't possible because "para hacer gradualismo, es necesario que haya financiamiento y lamentablemente... no hay plata" ("to do gradualism, you need financing and unfortunately... there is no money"). The moment was broadcast live and quickly clipped by news outlets. LibertadDigital uploaded the segment to YouTube, where it picked up over 36,000 views and 903 likes within a single day.

What made the moment unusual was the crowd's reaction. Milei's supporters applauded him for delivering bad news. As Econlib contributor Marcos Falcone noted, it was likely the first time a newly elected president was cheered for telling constituents such a bitter economic truth. Milei framed the crisis as the result of "irresponsible fiscal and monetary policies" by the previous left-wing government and promised that the public sector, not taxpayers, would bear the cost of adjustment.

How It Spread

The phrase caught fire on Twitter/X within hours of the speech. On December 10, 2023, X user @soyunargento posted a video of Milei's supporters reacting to the "no hay plata" line in real time. The clip pulled in over 908,000 views and 30,000 likes in its first day. That same day, X user @pia_dmn uploaded a video of women dancing in response to the quote, which hit 78,000 views and 4,900 likes in 24 hours.

The meme didn't stay on Twitter. On WhatsApp, an audio clip of Milei's speech got remixed into a cumbia track that spread rapidly through group chats across Argentina. The song sampled Milei's delivery of the "no hay plata" line and set it to a danceable beat. According to Argentine media outlet Mejor Informado, many predicted the cumbia would be one of the most-played songs at holiday parties that December.

The meme straddled a line between genuine political commentary and dark humor. For Milei's supporters, "no hay plata" was a vindication: proof that their candidate was honest about the mess he inherited. For critics, it was gallows humor about a president openly admitting the country was broke. Both camps made memes.

How to Use This Meme

"No hay plata" typically gets deployed in a few ways:

- Reaction clip: Share the video of Milei saying the line when someone suggests an expensive plan, purchase, or policy. Works for both political and personal finance contexts. - Image macro: Pair a still of Milei speaking with the caption "No hay plata" over situations where money is needed but absent. Common setups include payday vs. end-of-month comparisons. - Audio remix: The cumbia version gets shared in group chats and used as a soundtrack for short-form videos about financial struggles. - Text-only: Simply typing "no hay plata" as a reply to any post about spending, budgets, or economic plans. The phrase works on its own as shorthand for "we're broke."

Cultural Impact

Milei's speech was unprecedented for an inaugural address. Rather than making crowd-pleasing promises, he quoted libertarian economists like Jesús Huerta de Soto and Alberto Benegas Lynch, and praised 19th-century President Julio Argentino Roca, a figure who had been criticized by the left in recent years. The speech also included a significant foreign policy shift: Argentina's new Minister of Foreign Affairs announced the country would immediately pursue OECD membership, reversing the previous administration's direction.

The "no hay plata" moment captured international attention partly because of how counterintuitive it was. A president being applauded for announcing austerity stood out against the backdrop of populist politics across Latin America. Former President Mauricio Macri attended the ceremony and said he "would not have made a single change" to Milei's speech. Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was also present, a notable contrast to the previous Argentine government's outreach to Russia.

In Argentina, the phrase entered everyday conversation as a shorthand response to any suggestion that required money. The cumbia remix turned what could have been pure anxiety into something people could dance to, following the Argentine saying "al mal tiempo, buena cara" ("put on a good face in bad times").

Fun Facts

Milei is the first self-described anarcho-capitalist to be elected head of state anywhere in the world.

The cumbia remix spread primarily through WhatsApp forwards before hitting other platforms, a distribution pattern common in Latin American viral content.

In his inaugural speech, Milei quoted the definition of classical liberalism as "the unrestricted respect for one's neighbor's life plan based on the non-aggression principle".

The speech's reception was unusual enough that Econlib published an analysis of its cultural significance the day after.

Frequently Asked Questions