Text Only
Search

Many Zimbabweans Priced Out Of Markets For Basic Foods

04 September 2008
Interview With Simon Mhlanga - Download (MP3) audio clip
Interview With Simon Mhlanga - Listen (MP3) audio clip
Interview With Misheck Moyo - Download (MP3) audio clip
Interview With Misheck Moyo - Listen (MP3) audio clip

Some Zimbabweans, even in what used to be considered the middle class, are finding themselves priced out of local markets for food as stores and vendors demand payment in hard currencies like the U.S. dollar and South African rand.

The Zimbabwean dollar is depreciating to fast that sellers of all kinds of goods want payment in foreign exchange to hedge against losses in the local currency so they will be able to restock and stay in business.

Similarly, many if not most Zimbabwean landlords are demanding rents be paid in hard currency.

Food prices are rising hourly, leaving many Zimbabwean families hungry.

Simon Mhlanga of Chiredzi said most families he knows have one meal a day or none at all.

Accountant Misheck Moyo of Karoi said that even as a professional he is living hand-to-mouth.

More reports from VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe...

 

 

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Top Story
US Auto Companies Appeal to Congress for Help  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Major European Interest Rate Cuts Fail to Rally World Markets  Audio Clip Available
Rice Says Pakistan Committed to Mumbai Investigation
Israeli Soldiers Drag Jewish Settlers From House in Hebron  Audio Clip Available
Zimbabwe Declares National Cholera Emergency  Audio Clip Available
Russia Set for Immediate Response to Positive US Signals  Audio Clip Available
Bombers Strike as Iraq Gives Final Approval of US Pact
Canadian PM Shuts Down Parliament to Avoid No-Confidence Vote
Chistmas Pageantry Begins In Washington
UN Security Council Has 'Cautious Optimism' for Afghanistan's Future  Audio Clip Available
Bangkok Airport Back in Operation, But Economic Pain May Linger  Audio Clip Available
S. Korean School Isolates N. Korean Defectors to Better Integrate Them  Audio Clip Available
Measles Deaths Worldwide Fall by 74 Percent  Audio Clip Available
NASA Delays 2009 Mars Mission Due to Technical Problems  Audio Clip Available