this post was submitted on 21 Jul 2024
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In a country dominated by authoritarianism and poor economic prospects, the population can only cover half a basket of basic goods, according to a report by Hagamos Democracia

Despite the propaganda put out by the regime led by Daniel Ortega and his wife, the “co-president” Rosario Murillo, 86.8% of Nicaraguans insist that they cannot afford the cost of a basket of basic goods. The data comes from a report entitled Perception of the Political, Social and Economic Reality of Nicaragua, carried out by Hagamos Democracia (Let’s Make Democracy). The independent report, based on 200 surveys, adds that 87.3% of those surveyed stated that their income does not allow them to cover all their monthly and daily expenses. Only 12.7% said that it did.

For a family of four to feed itself in Nicaragua, it needs to spend 14,414 córdobas ($394) a month in groceries alone. This means that not even two minimum state worker wages can buy basic food items for a family. And there’s still the cost of household expenses on top, such as rent, gas, transportation, water, electricity, soap, detergent, toothpaste and clothing.

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago

Despite the propaganda put out by the regime led by Daniel Ortega and his wife, the “co-president” Rosario Murillo, 86.8% of Nicaraguans insist that they cannot afford the cost of a basket of basic goods.

This is a global trend rn. Governments insist everything is great, but citizens cant afford what they need. Credit card debt is skyrocketing and now so are defaults.

The economic bubble is here, when it pops youre gonna see some serious shit.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago

This is the country where the President's wife is the VP. And the president was once the socialist hero, but is now the villain.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago

Meanwhile, Elon Musk is cashing a 46 billion dollar check.

I wonder what's wrong.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago

Ortega government is a repressive authoritarian one and it's been tightening the screw for a long time. A lot of priests have disappeared in the middle of the night which is crazy when you consider it's a very religious country. Tourists and expats who have been critical of the government on Facebook in the past are being banned from the country and expulsed mid stay, actual Nicas know not to talk bad of Ortega online. There was a lot of very fucked up things happening during the protests.

There is also essentially no middle class and the water quality and housing is terrible. There's a lot of kidney problems amongst kids because of the water quality. The one good thing about the country is it's free healthcare, which is kind of funny seeing the poorest country in central america implement something that is apparently out of reach for the richest country on the continent. The healthcare obviously isn't great and you still have to pay for your medication but still.

All that to say that the article is skewering things a bit. If it truly cost 400$, the country would be essentially a graveyard. A lot of them don't even make minimum wage, the country doesn't have the infrastructure to actually police it's businesses.

This is really the crux of it:

What you do is adapt: you eat rice, beans, instant soups, cheese when you can afford it, or a cheese substitute like cream because it goes further,

There hasn't been a time in Nicaragua's history when this wasn't the main stable diet. Their national meal is rice and beans pan fried, it's what they all eat for breakfast. They don't mention what they consider basic foods in the article but I'm guessing they added meat everyday or ketchup and relish to the list (any kind of name brand sauce or products are brutally expensive). Sadly, a basic "western" diet is essentially out of reach for all average citizens of developing countries. We live in luxury while the rest suffer.

It's also worth noting that the US is essentially trying to starve the Nicas using sanctions so they revolt. Although the price of beans and rice has gone up, we aren't there (yet) as the article makes it seem. I don't think it's the best solution, it's definitely the worse for the population, but authoritarian governments are difficult to dislodge and political assassination are a no go these days so idk.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 months ago

all that 1% money is going to trickle down any minute now...