Crushed by the oppressive brutality of Putin’s economic polices, for instance food price inflation ten times — yes, ten times — that of Europe, the impoverished people of Russia are in open revolt against their neo-Soviet masters as their lives grow bleaker by the day. Russia has completely lost control of its currency and stock market, which now move pathetically in lock step with world crude oil markets totally beyond Russia’s control.
The Los Angeles Times reports on the horrifying privations the pathetic Russians are experiencing as a result of all this failure, no different than they were in Soviet times. If you imagine for those soaring prices Russians are at least getting quality food products, think again. Read it and weep, Russophiles.
The cheeses are spotted with mold. The sausages are ominously gray. Slime is beginning to overtake the chicken. But the stooped and slow clientele who crowd this pungent stretch of market stalls in the southern fringes of the Russian capital don’t seem bothered. Elderly retirees mass and push before spreads of lukewarm yogurt and moldering fish. Business has never been better, the steely-eyed manager says.
Theoretically, selling expired foodstuffs is a crime punishable by fine under Russian law. But the climbing prices, falling salaries and withering demand of Russia’s economy appear to be driving a surge in the sale of past-their-prime goods.
Trafficking in spoiled food, a familiar racket during the chaotic collapse of the Soviet Union, is making a comeback in both markets and wholesale Internet shopping. A semi-underground enterprise, it is difficult to trace. But consumer groups, shoppers and anecdotal evidence all indicate its ascendance.
“If you lower the price to pennies, people will buy it even at the risk of being poisoned,” says Irina Vinogradova, director of the Russian Institute of Consumer Evaluation. “This crisis has led some people into a situation where they have absolutely no money to survive on.”
Outside the market, known as the Moskvoretskoye, Galina Abrosimova shows off a tub of cottage cheese she bought for the equivalent of about 30 cents. The cheese is tepid;the date on the lid shows it expired two weeks ago.
“So what?” she says, tucking it shyly back into a dirt-smeared shopping bag. “If I don’t like the taste, I’ll just use it for pancakes.”
Abrosimova, 82, is a retired construction engineer who has carefully painted her lips pink before venturing forth into the world. Her overcoat is grimy and her flat shoes scuffed, but she has draped a lace scarf around her throat and covered her white hair with a brunet wig.
She lists the cheapest places she has found to scrounge for spoiled food in Moscow. The Moskvoretskoye is the market for dairy, she says. Fruit and vegetables are cheapest at a market near her house, where one aisle is set aside for expired goods.
Abrosimova can’t afford meat, but she knows a canning factory in the far northern suburbs out by the railroad tracks that unloads lightly rotten fish for pennies.
“They sell some horrible stuff there,” she says. “It makes you sorry to see it.”
But she goes every week, scavenging several days’ worth of fish for about $1.20.
Like many of the shoppers here, Abrosimova had been buying spoiled food even before the crisis hit. Supermarkets are an impossible dream for many of Russia’s retirees, surviving on pensions. They spend their days shuffling from one far corner of Moscow to the next, hunting the best bargains.
Most Russians still haven’t been forced to buy spoiled food. But these days, Abrosimova shrugs, she’s competing with bigger crowds. You can’t be lazy, she says — you have to arrive early. And you have to understand how to handle the food, shoppers warn sagely, to discern between slightly spoiled and potentially sickening.
“You have to be careful with meat,” says Nikolai Terekhov, 69. “The part that looks weather-beaten has to be cut off and boiled or roasted for a very long time.”
Terekhov trained as a doctor and served in the Soviet military in Germany. Now he wanders from the market, gazes up the road through foggy glasses and jokes, “The buses look like hearses, bringing loads of old people here.”
But he shrugs it off. “You have to survive. You have to adjust. That’s our life,” he says. “We’ve been adjusting all our lives.”
In the middle of the market, a group of middle-aged men clusters around a metal table, swapping newspaper sections and running eyes over their domain. They wear suits or leather; they look tough and wary, as if they were sent over from a “Sopranos” casting call. When they notice a foreign reporter wandering from stand to stand, they send over a pair of burly security guards in black jumpsuits to hover along.
“What are you doing? You can’t take photographs here,” one of the guards says, although nobody is taking photographs and the only camera is zipped into a bag, out of sight.
Staring and muttering, the men at the metal table fan out to the market stalls and, one after the next, shutters crash to the floor, hiding the foodstuffs from sight. Bang! There goes the moldering fish. Bang! The expired cans of goose liver pate. Bang! The old milk.
The elderly shoppers blink around in confusion. The market isn’t supposed to close for hours yet.
The manager’s name is Pyotr Aksyonov. As the shutters clang to the ground he comes strolling over.
“Let me put it this way,” he says of the expired food. “Some deviations are found everywhere, and here is no exception.”
He pauses, then adds: “We weren’t prepared for your visit.”
There is a system, Aksyonov says. The market thrives by accepting damaged and leftover goods from the nearby factories and warehouses, thereby cutting down on transport costs. And, sure, why not sell dented cans or crumpled boxes? The contents, he insists, are still good. Or at least, good enough.
Aksyonov’s business has been booming, he adds, since the financial crisis struck. As for the authorities, he insists that his market is subjected to regular inspections, and always passes muster. Times are tough, he shrugs, and anyway, his market is providing a service.
“Low-income and even lower-middle-class people who lost their jobs can no longer afford supermarkets,” he says. “We are trying to accommodate them. We are trying the best we can to make them able to buy something.”
As for the authorities, he insists that his market is subjected to regular inspections, and always passes muster.
Missing from that sentence is that the authorities accept his bribe money.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8070814.stm
My God…
I can’t find words to say what I think about it…
I think the problem is that Putin did not want to build a true free market system. Russia is still an oligarchy and those oligarchs who are friends with Putin get more rich.
It is bad when only few people control the wealth in Russia.
Romulus and Remus might not mythical after all :-))
In Russia, some people are raised by stray cats and stary dogs and some people eat stray cats and stray dogs.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/cold-hunger-and-job-losses-ignite-dissent-in-russian-town-1690418.html
The situation speaks to how underdeveloped and undercapitalized Russian agriculture is. As a sector no real effort was made to privatize collectives properly and that would include real property rights which also never got off the ground after all of these years since the USSR.
In a civilized country the pensioned and poor can get food stamps, food from a food bank and if like some of the mentally ill homeless dumpster diving would be free.
And where are the public health officials that ought to be protecting the public from spoiled food?
Now that the tide has rolled out from the fat cash years of high oil and gas prices Putin’s Russia is looking pretty pathetic.
You are kidding about the “public health officials,” are you not? Why, they are busily collecting bribes and kickbacks, of course, so that the places stay open to generate even more money for future bribes and kickbacks.
Bushobamics is Crushing the People of the United States.
Hundreds of thousands of retiring state employees and teachers now face the stark choice of accepting much reduced pension checks or working past their retirement age.
CalPERS is the largest pension fund in the US and the fourth largest in the world. At its height in October 2007 it had $260 billion in assets, comparable to the GDP of Poland, Indonesia or Denmark. At the end of 2008 CalPERS was worth $186 billion, one of its worst annual declines since the fund’s inception in 1932. It is one of the latest casualties of the financial collapse on Wall Street.
After years of gambling in real estate investments, the state workers pension fund has lost more than 41 percent of its value, after peaking last fall. Its real estate holdings have dropped from $9 billion to $5.8 billion, according to the Sacramento Bee.
California’s pension and budget defaults are not isolated phenomena. All across the US state pension funds have been collapsing due to the broader economic crisis.
But United States is not an oligarchy like Russia is. Few people do not control 63% of the wealth in the United States.
And Bush supported Reaganomics. Obama is trying to fix the problems Reaganomics caused in the United States.
Careful what you say bob, don’t say liberal things around here, they’ll jump you.
Bushobamics is Crushing the People of the United States
And Bush supported Reaganomics. Obama is trying to fix the problems Reaganomics caused in the United States.
Get out our here you liberal jerk. Go back to North Korea and study the art of making canned Kim Chi, you Marxists.
Obama is destroying our economy. He has turned a recession into a near depression. Unemployment is going up every day. Companies are slashing costs and they may have entered into a death spiral.
The stimulus and the bloated budget has done nothing but bankrupt the Federal Reserve. But the MSM doesn’t report it. Just look around. The economy is a mess. Obama’s policies are to blame.
Democrats are threatening to tax the internet and adopt a European version of the VAT. Tax, tax, tax.
The producers are being too heavily burdened while the idle rich, like Teresa Heinz Kerry, cash in their tax free bonds.
Enough is enough. Progressives like you, who are really regressive, need to move to other countries and stop f’ing up this one.
Oh yeah, you were right Marc :)
Kolchak, I don’t think they have many outspoken “liberal jerks” in North Korea. (At least outside of the concentration camps.)
No you can go to your namesake in Zimboonwe
Strange.
I wonder, why in real, not mythical Russia, people are byuing normal food in supermarkets for normal price? ;)
By real you mean St.Petersburg or Moscow?
By “mythical” you mean everywhere else in Russia?