Yes. Thank you.
As I was saying, the priority of the government right now is to establish dialogue with all the parties. Second, it's to attend to the urgent social and economic demands. Those are the most important priorities for the government.
The current situation, which we've been facing for more than a month, is affecting my country economically. It's affecting the most vulnerable people. I mentioned the blockades. We had 78 blockades last week, and now we have 52. These blockades affect the most vulnerable people, because there's no possibility to do trade. The Peruvian economy, unfortunately, is 75% informal, and it is mostly encompassed by entrepreneurs. These are small microenterprises that live on a day-to-day basis. The effect of these blockades has been very hard.
Besides that, those blockades affect the right to education and health. It affects the current vaccination program that we are implementing. We have just received the bivalent vaccines. It is not possible to get vaccinations to the remote places where the most vulnerable people are, because the roads are closed. The right to education is also affected, because the school year begins in March. The education ministry needs to send new materials to the public schools, check on all the infrastructure and do renovations.
What I'm trying to tell you is that as a government, we're doing our best to attend to the urgent demands. President Boluarte has been very clear in saying that she considers her government a transitional one. The other political objective and priority is to try to hold an electoral process as soon as possible. At the same time, as a state, we have to function. We have to attend to the urgent demands of the people. I've given you two clear examples, which are health and education.