logo
'No rice, no sugar, no eggs': Bolivians despair as economy tanks

'No rice, no sugar, no eggs': Bolivians despair as economy tanks

Time of India13-06-2025
Representative AI image
Waiting in line for hours, often in vain, for basics such as cooking oil has become a way of life in Bolivia, where anger over shortages and skyrocketing prices has exploded into violence.
Making matters worse: a campaign of roadblocks to protest the crisis has blocked major routes used for the delivery of food and medicine, fueling the scarcity.
"We never thought this situation would reach such an extreme, where we would have to stand in line for food or toilet paper," Rocio Perez, a 65-year-old pensioner told AFP at her home in La Paz.
She lives with her children and grandchildren, and the family has taken to rationing what they eat.
"We are staring into the abyss," said Perez.
At a nearby warehouse selling state-subsidized groceries, 40-year-old Sonia, who did not want to give her surname, queued in extreme cold from 5 am for cooking oil, only to leave empty-handed when stocks ran out some two hours later.
Only those who arrived at 4 am were in luck.
"I am a single mother, I have to work to support my six children... and on top of that, come and stand in this line," Sonia told AFP, clearly angry.
"I don't sleep well anymore."
Other irate customers banged on the store's metal doors and shouted at the state employees inside.
"There's no rice, no sugar, no eggs, there's nothing left," exclaimed 30-year-old Gisela Vargas, who also left with nothing.
Bolivia, home to 12 million people and an Indigenous majority, is one of the poorest countries in South America despite sitting on vast mineral resources such as gas and lithium.
In 2023, state oil company YPFB said Bolivia was running out of natural gas -- a crucial export product -- due to a lack of investment in new exploration.
A dramatic drop in gas exports led foreign currency reserves to plummet, making Bolivia unable to import sufficient fuel for its needs.
Inflation in May was 18.4 percent year-on-year, the highest in nearly two decades, and the local currency, the Boliviano, continues to lose value.
-
'I feel helpless' -
The crisis, which many Bolivians blame on President Luis Arce, has been compounded by a showdown between Arce and ex-leader Evo Morales, who retains a strong support base, especially among Indigenous people.
Morales supporters have been blockading roads since June 2.
At least four officers and one protester have been killed in clashes just weeks before elections in which Morales wants to seek a fourth term despite a two-term constitutional limit.
A survey by the Panterra consultancy in March found 89 percent of Bolivians want the country to take a "very different direction," with the rising cost of living by far the main concern.
"In terms of purchasing power, wages are deteriorating very strongly" with rising inflation, said economist Jose Luis Evia, a former member of the board of the Central Bank of Bolivia.
Francisca Flores, a 69-year-old street vendor, said she has had to cut back on chicken, formerly an affordable source of protein, after the price per kilogram doubled in just a few months.
She now eats omelets and other egg-based dishes instead.
"I feel helpless," Flores told AFP at La Garita de Lima, a busy commercial area of La Paz where hundreds of people formed a long queue as a truck started unloading chickens for sale.
"I go out with my little money... and if I can't buy anything, well, I just go home and endure it," she said.
Medicines, too, have become scarcer and more expensive.
- The left in trouble -
Bolivia saw what has been described as a short-lived "economic miracle" under the 2006-2019 presidency of Morales, with Arce as his economy minister.
Morales, Bolivia's first Indigenous president, nationalized hydrocarbons and invested the income in infrastructure and social programs.
The country experienced more than 4 percent annual growth while poverty rates tumbled from 60 percent to 37 percent, according to official figures at the time.
But critics say Morales' failure to implement structural economic reforms meant the growth was unsustainable.
Evia believes the resultant social unrest could be the undoing of the left, which has governed Bolivia for nearly two decades, in the August elections.
"There is growing consensus for change," he said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

TikTok launches crowd-sourced debunking tool in U.S.
TikTok launches crowd-sourced debunking tool in U.S.

The Hindu

time2 hours ago

  • The Hindu

TikTok launches crowd-sourced debunking tool in U.S.

TikTok on Wednesday rolled out a crowd-sourced debunking system in the United States, becoming the latest tech platform to adopt a community-driven approach to combating online misinformation. Footnotes, a feature that the popular video-sharing app began testing in April, allows vetted users to suggest written context for content that might be wrong or misleading, similar to Community Notes on Meta and X. "Footnotes draws on the collective knowledge of the TikTok community by allowing people to add relevant information to content," Adam Presser, the platform's head of operations and trust and safety, said in a blog post. "Starting today, U.S. users in the Footnotes pilot program can start to write and rate footnotes on short videos, and our US community will begin to see the ones rated as helpful, and rate them, too," he added. TikTok said nearly 80,000 U.S.-based users, who have maintained an account for at least six months, have qualified as Footnotes contributors. The video-sharing app has some 170 million U.S. users. TikTok said the feature will augment the platform's existing integrity measures such as labelling content that cannot be verified and partnering with fact-checking organisations, such as AFP, to assess the accuracy of posts on the platform. The crowd-sourced verification system was popularised by Elon Musk's platform X, but researchers have repeatedly questioned its effectiveness in combating falsehoods. Earlier this month, a study found more than 90% of X's Community Notes are never published, highlighting major limits in efficacy. The Digital Democracy Institute of the Americas (DDIA) study analysed the entire public dataset of 1.76 million notes published by X between January 2021 and March 2025. TikTok cautioned it may take some time for a footnote to become public, as contributors get started and become more familiar with the feature. "The more footnotes get written and rated on different topics, the smarter and more effective the system becomes," Presser said. Tech platforms increasingly view the community-driven model as an alternative to professional fact-checking. Earlier this year, Meta ended its third-party fact-checking program in the United States, with chief executive Mark Zuckerberg saying it had led to "too much censorship." The decision was widely seen as an attempt to appease U.S. President Donald Trump, whose conservative base has long complained that fact-checking on tech platforms serves to curtail free speech and censor right-wing content. Professional fact-checkers vehemently reject the claim. As an alternative, Zuckerberg said Meta's platforms, Facebook and Instagram, would use "Community Notes." Studies have shown Community Notes can work to dispel some falsehoods, like vaccine misinformation, but researchers have long cautioned that it works best for topics where there is broad consensus. Some researchers have also cautioned that Community Notes users can be motivated to target political opponents by partisan beliefs.

Donald Trump vs Russia's Medvedev: Why is US deploying nuclear submarines?
Donald Trump vs Russia's Medvedev: Why is US deploying nuclear submarines?

Hindustan Times

time3 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

Donald Trump vs Russia's Medvedev: Why is US deploying nuclear submarines?

In a dramatic escalation of tensions with Russia, US President Donald Trump on Friday announced he had ordered the deployment of two nuclear submarines, citing "provocative" remarks by Russian official Dmitry Medvedev. US President Donald Trump said on August 1, 2025, that he had ordered deployment of two nuclear submarines in response "highly provocative" comments by then Russian President Dmitry Medvedev..(AFP) The move marked a sharp departure from mere rhetorical differences to military posturing amid growing friction between the two nuclear-armed nations over the Ukraine war. 'Based on the highly provocative statements,' Donald Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform, 'I have ordered two Nuclear Submarines to be positioned in the appropriate regions, just in case these foolish and inflammatory statements are more than just that.' 'Words are very important, and can often lead to unintended consequences, I hope this will not be one of those instances,' he added. Trump's public reference to submarine deployment is unusual, given the classified nature of such operations, however, it adds a new layer of seriousness to a dispute that began as online taunts but has now veered into potentially dangerous territory. Why is Donald Trump angry? The trigger for Trump's action appears to be a string of social media exchanges with Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chairman of Russia's Security Council, who on Thursday invoked the Soviet-era 'Dead Hand' automated nuclear system in a Telegram post, referencing a Cold War-era doomsday protocol, reported news agency AFP. Trump reacted strongly in an interview, saying: 'When you mention the word 'nuclear'... my eyes light up. And I say, we better be careful, because it's the ultimate threat.' In the same interview, he confirmed the submarines were 'closer to Russia' and said, 'We always want to be ready. And so I have sent to the region two nuclear submarines. I just want to make sure that his words are only words and nothing more than that.' Trump did not clarify whether the submarines were nuclear-powered or nuclear-armed, nor did he reveal their exact deployment locations. The information typically classified by the Pentagon. What Dmitry Medvedev said The war of words began earlier this week when Trump, on his social media platform, called Russia's and India's economies 'dead.' Medvedev fired back, accusing the US president of 'playing the ultimatum game' and warning that Trump 'should remember' that Russia is a formidable force. On Monday, Medvedev wrote on X: 'He [Trump] should remember the formidable potential of our country.' On Thursday, he escalated further by referencing the 'fabled 'Dead Hand'.' Trump returned fire by branding Medvedev 'the failed former President of Russia, who thinks he's still President,' and warned: 'He's entering very dangerous territory!' Medvedev, president of Russia from 2008 to 2012, has transformed in recent years into one of the Kremlin's most provocative online voices, frequently promoting ultra-nationalist narratives. However, analysts note that his influence on actual policy is limited. Russia's nuclear moves and the Ukraine backdrop Tensions were already high before the Trump-Medvedev exchange. Hours earlier, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Moscow had begun mass production of the nuclear-capable Oreshnik hypersonic missile and planned to deploy them in Belarus by the end of the year. 'Work is now underway to prepare these positions,' Putin said, standing alongside Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko. 'So, most likely, we will close this issue by the end of the year,' he added. Putin also reiterated his long-standing demands for ending the war in Ukraine, saying, 'Our demands are unchanged.' He was talking about Moscow' long standing ask that Kyiv abandon its NATO ambitions and cede disputed territory. Despite US pressure, Russia's offensive in Ukraine continues. A missile and drone attack on Kyiv Thursday killed 31 people, including five children, prompting a day of mourning in the Ukrainian capital. President Volodymyr Zelensky renewed his call for direct talks with Putin. 'The United States has proposed this. Ukraine has supported it. What is needed is Russia's readiness,' Zelensky said on X. The United States and Russia collectively control about 90% of the world's nuclear weapons. The US maintains a triad of land, sea, and air-based systems, with nuclear-armed submarines on continuous patrol.

Trump stakes reputation as dealmaker with tariff policy
Trump stakes reputation as dealmaker with tariff policy

Economic Times

time4 hours ago

  • Economic Times

Trump stakes reputation as dealmaker with tariff policy

Donald Trump is staking his reputation as a tough negotiator and slick dealmaker -- that has served him well throughout his life -- with his ultra-muscular, protectionist tariffs Friday, the White House released a picture of the US president seen with a smartphone pressed to his ear, with the caption: "Making calls. Making deals. MAKING AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!"Every trade deal announced by the president, who is convinced that tariffs are both a tool and manifestation of America's economic might, is celebrated by his supporters as a show of his negotiating week's flurry of rate changes was no different. On Thursday, with the stroke of a black marker, the former real estate developer slapped fresh tariffs on dozens of US trade partners. They will kick in on August 7 instead of August 1, which had previously been touted as a hard Republican leader's backtracking, frequently setting trade deadlines only to rescind or extend them -- he most recently granted Mexico a 90-day extension -- has given rise to the mocking acronym "TACO" ("Trump always chickens out"). The jokes implying Trump is all talk and no action on trade have previously struck a nerve for the president. Not chicken But analysts believe there will be no going back this has "not chickened out," according to Josh Lipsky, an international economics expert at the Atlantic Council think told AFP the president is "following through, if not exceeding" what he vowed during his campaign in respect to Aks, a public policy analyst at Evercore ISI, said he did not anticipate a "massive shift" on the latest order, aside from some economies like Taiwan or India striking deals during the seven-day crunch negotiations leading up to the tariffs announcement, Trump struck a series of compromises, notably with the European Union, Japan, and South Korea, setting varying tax rates and touting high investments in the United States. The details of these agreements remain vague and leave the door open to key questions: Are exemptions possible? What will become of key sectors like automobiles, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors? And what of China?The US president and leaders of other countries "have reasons to avoid going into detailed agreements" explained Aks, allowing all sides to present the deals in the most positive, or least negative, way possible to their ability to conclude deals -- often with or without crucial detail -- is, for the 79-year-old Republican, an integral part of his political signature. Art form In his book "The Art of the Deal," the billionaire wrote: "Deals are my art form. Other people paint beautifully on canvas or write wonderful poetry. I like making deals, preferably big deals. That's how I get my kicks."Trump explained in his book that he always "protects" himself "by being flexible." "I never get too attached to one deal or one approach."But despite comments about his trade policy reversals, Trump has hardly budged from his trade strategy, and that could prove politically a survey conducted by Quinnipiac University published in mid-July, only 40 percent of respondents said they supported the president's trade policy, while 56 percent criticized it. The latest employment figures bear the marks of Trump's protectionist offensive, according to experts. Job creation in May and June was revised sharply downward, falling to levels not seen since the Covid-19 pandemic.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store