Inflationary pressures force Lebanese to make tough choices
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[September 09, 2021]
By Maha El Dahan and Alaa Kanaan
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Ibrahim Jaber was laid
off when the fast food restaurant where he worked as a chef in Beirut
shut down. Unable to find another job, he had to take his daughter out
of school to put food on the table at home.
He is one of many Lebanese who have found themselves facing staggering
inflation just as their employers, also hit by the country's spiralling
financial crisis, cut back or close.
"I will not register my daughter in school, I can't afford it," Jaber
said. "The owners (of the restaurant) used to give us a fund for school,
now we don't get it."
Those who kept their jobs have seen the real value of their salaries
dramatically reduced as the currency has lost around 90% of its value
against the dollar in the past two years.
"I would rather work anywhere in the world, even just picking up
garbage, than stay in this country," Jaber said.
Experts are warning of hyperinflation if Lebanon's deeply divided
politicians do not form a government soon to tackle a financial crisis
which began in 2019 and threatens to destabilise a country torn by civil
war in 1975-90.
The World Food Programme (WFP) says food inflation has risen by as much
as 557% since Oct. 2019.
"We are talking one in five people or families struggling to put food on
the table," WFP spokeswoman Rasha Abou Dargham said.
Many families she visits on a regular basis are choosing to skip meals
to feed their children while others are relying on the goodwill of
nearby bakeries to send them free food every once in a while in order to
cope.
VICIOUS CYCLE
With the cost of living rising steeply, the caretaker government has
promised employees various bonuses, including an increase in their
transport allowance by 16,000 Lebanese pounds a day, less than a dollar
at the current market rate.
Some economists argue this will only add to the inflationary cycle and
eventually lead to hyperinflation if sustainable reforms are not
implemented.
"As soon as you get into that cycle whereby you have cost of living
adjustments ... but you don't have any more revenue to fund them, you're
just printing money, then that creates a vicious cycle," Nasser Saidi, a
leading economist and former minister, said.
Officials from the caretaker government were not immediately available
to comment.
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Ibrahim Jaber, a chef who used to work at Classic Sandwich
restaurant, gestures during an interview with Reuters, in Beirut,
Lebanon September 1, 2021. REUTERS/Alaa Kanaan
Inflation was one of the main reasons behind Ali
Hammoud's decision to shut down his popular Classic Sandwich
restaurant where Jaber used to work cooking in-house and takeaway
orders.
With fewer and fewer customers as prices went up, Hammoud had to pay
more and more for fuel to keep his private generators running in the
absence of state electricity and to keep his delivery bikes on the
road.
He now plans to move his business somewhere out of Lebanon, saying
he had delayed the decision despite mounting problems because he was
worried about how his 230 employees would manage.
"That's 230 families without income now, and I don't think they can
find another job," he said.
Food importers warn shortages could hit soon as they are
increasingly unable to afford the stock. Some supermarket aisles
already have large empty spaces.
Hani Bohsali who heads the Syndicate of Importers of Foodstuffs,
said he was pretty sure many companies had already reduced imports
although it would take a while to show up in official data. "There
is no master plan," he said.
In one Beirut supermarket, customers were returning many items to
the shelves after checking the price.
"This is the truth today, there are people who can't afford to eat,"
one shopper, Naja Shallita said.
"I don't know where we're heading."
(Reporting By Maha El Dahan and Alaa Kanaan; editing by Philippa
Fletcher)
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