Zimbabwe’s Inflation Makes it Hard to Keep Track of Cost of Living

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Villagers gather food Jan. 15 at a distribution point near Harare, Zimbabwe. With poverty on the rise and a drought compounding Zimbabwe's problems, people are struggling to make ends meet and the poor are becoming poorer, church workers said. (CNS photo/Aaron Ufumeli, EPA) See ZIMBABWE-POVERTY-PROBLEMS Jan. 29, 2016.

HARARE, Nov 8 2019 (IPS) – Stung by the country’s spiralling inflation, Zimbabwe’s government workers took to the streets this week for the first ever police-sectioned march demanding improved wages.

They asked the Minister of Finance Mthuli Ncube “to commit to a process of restoring the value of workers’ salaries to the pre-October 2018 status of $475 for the lowest-paid worker”.  Currently some teachers earn about $50 a month.

Amid a heavy police presence, the protestors were barred from marching to Ncube’s offices where they intended to deliver their petition.

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