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'It makes a person want to cry': Inside the day-to-day struggle to get food in one of the world's most unstable countries

REUTERS/Mariana Bazo

International attention has largely focused on Venezuela's fractious political environment and its ongoing macroeconomic unraveling.

But for Venezuelans, day-to-day life has, in recent months, been mostly focused on getting the staples of their diets from the ever more barren shelves of the country's grocery stores.

Dwindling food supplies are just one element of the economic stagnation brought on in Venezuela by the global oil price slump. As foreign income falls, the government has few resources to import food goods. And, as Venezuela's inflation rates reach dizzying heights, what food stuffs are available are priced up, out of the reach of most of the country's residents.

"We are eating worse than before," Liliana Tovar, a Caracas resident, told Reuters in late April. "If we eat breakfast, we don't eat lunch, if we eat lunch, we don't eat dinner, and if we eat dinner, we don't eat breakfast."

Poor and middle-class Venezuela's increasingly rely on the country's state-run food stores, where heavy subsidies keep goods affordable. But what goods are on shelves, what how much there is to go around, is unpredictable.

"You have to get into these never ending lines — all day, five in the morning until three in the afternoon — to see if you get a couple of little bags of flour or some butter," taxi driver Jhonny Mendez, 58, told Reuters in April.

"It makes a person want to cry."

People buy food and other staple goods inside a supermarket in Caracas, Venezuela, June 30, 2016.

REUTERS/Mariana Bazo

According to a recent study, 87% of Venezuelans say their income is now insufficient to purchase their food needs.

Shoppers routinely spend hours in lines to buy staples such as corn flour and laundry soap, turning lines into sites of shoving matches and now more frequent attempts to plunder shops.



At the start of May, a minimum wage is now only about 20% of the cost of feeding a family of five, according to a monitoring group cited by Reuters. Lines snake around state-run supermarkets, where regulations keep prices low, from before dawn.

REUTERS/Mariana Bazo

At times, high demand and limited supplies have left Venezuela's shelves heavily stocked with items no one buys, like soft drinks, while high-demand items like milk are nowhere to be found.

Source: Business Insider



REUTERS/Mariana Bazo

See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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