Do Belarusian salaries correspond with prices for food and clothes?
An employable Belarusian man is supposed to spend no more than 8 thousand roubles a day for food. Such sum is included in the consumer basket. The European Radi
There is a list of products (the necessary minimum) which a Belarusian
inhabitant is supposed to eat during a day. This list includes:
Bread,
white bread, flour, macaroni, rice, oatmeal, buckweat, millet,
pearlbarley, peas, potatoes, cabbage, vegetables, canned vegetables,
oil, butter, milk, sour cream, cheese, cottage cheese, eggs, sausage,
beef, pork, paultry, fresh fish, herring, fruit, juices, sugar, dried
fruit, tea, salt.
According to the calculations made by
the European Radio for Belarus, a family of three people should spend
only for food, not counting the necessary clothes, communal service
payments etc., approximately 660 thousand roubles per month in order not
to die of hunger. For comparison, an average salary in our country at
present amounts to 1 million 130 thousand roubles.
Do Belarusian
salaries correspond with prices for food and clothes? The European Radio
for Belarus asked this question to the economist Siarhej Chaly.
“I would say it's the other way round - the prices correspond with salaries, moreover, correspond at full scope”, — says the expert:
“As
our economical structure is highly monopolized, there's no room for
competition, thus, the prices in such economy are set in accordance with
ablebodied demand of the population. Roughly speaking, the prices will
be set in such a way to let them take all your money, in any case.
It
is very simple. Each increase of the population's incomes momentarily
reflects on the common price level, in the first place it concerns
prices for goods which make a considerable share of daily consumption:
communal services, food...”
According to the economist, the
poorest Belarusians suffer the most when salaries are increased, as this
increase leads to corresponding increase of prices:
“Salaries
are increased in such a way that the major part of this increase
concerns the most highly paid categories of the population. But the
prices increase frontally, they cannot be different for the rich and the
poor.
The final result of such policy is that the categories
which are paid the least suffer the most, although they were the ones
the government intended to help. Increase of prices in the end of it all
surpasses increase of their incomes, moreover, the prices get high
exactly for the goods which make the biggest share in their expenses”.
The
European Radio for Belarus addressed to the people at Minsk streets
with a question: "Do you have enough money for all the food you like?".
Here are the answers:
— Nooo, we don't!
— We don't.
— 15 thousand roubles of subsistence allowance - that's not life. I constantly feel lack of money.
— I have enough money for food, with the exemption of, probably, exotic fish products.
—
I'm not sure. Probably, I don't have enough money for fruit. I would
like to eat it every day, but I don't have such a possibility.