Today, the Peruvian State is a prey held captive by the executive and legislative powers, by the old and new parties, left, center and right, by the politicians in office. In the meantime, the citizenry watches stupefied, passive, immobile, without knowing what to do.
The risk of the chronic crisis in Peru is to normalize the absence of long-term public policies, the absence of structural reforms and the continuity of problems in the institutional design which, although they are not the only cause of the crisis, are not addressed to contribute to its solution.