How Inflation and Low Wages Make Life Impossible in Venezuela

"When the minimum wage is $2 a month, life becomes a fight for the bare necessities."
This is a publication based on the suggested topic proposed in the Hive Learners community through their discord, which on this occasion is "The Cost Of Living".
Hello dear and loyal readers of my blog, I welcome you to another episode. This time, I’ll be talking to you about the cost of living in my country. This is an extremely important topic, especially for people like me who are independent and whose income depends solely on the rewards we get for the work we do. In my particular case, I stopped working for other people many years ago—around the year 2000—so I can say I’ve been working for myself, being my own boss, for about 25 years now. My situation is quite exceptional. The singularity lies in the fact that I live in Venezuela, a country that perhaps has the most severe financial crisis in Latin American history. Here, the cost of living is extremely high due to such savage inflation that we can even say the U.S. dollar itself has devalued, with two different exchange rates. The official dollar rate is much lower than the alternative or parallel dollar rate. Of course, merchants often make under-the-table transactions at the parallel dollar rate, even though it’s penalized and fined by authorities. Transactions are usually calculated at the parallel dollar rate when it comes to businesses, but they are forced to sell products at the official dollar rate. This causes huge losses because, often, to get physical dollars in cash, they have to pay the parallel rate. And now, digital dollars have become much harder to obtain. To give you an idea, my current cost of living here can be broken down as follows: I spend about $5 daily on just one meal. Let’s say breakfast costs $3-4, lunch $5, a snack $1—that’s $3 + $5 = $8, plus the snack ($1) = $9, plus dinner ($3), totaling around $12 per day on food. Multiplying that by 30, I’d spend $360 a month just on food—and that’s already expensive. Adding basic services like rent ($15) and internet ($30), that’s $45 more, bringing the total to $405 monthly just for food and essentials. If we include health expenses and personal care items—soap, shampoo, nail files, cologne, or skin perfumes—that’s another $25, easily reaching $430 a month. Considering that the minimum wage here is less than $2 a month, and a single person like me (no kids, no partner) spends around $430, I might even be underestimating. These calculations assume I buy prepared food delivered to me. If I had to buy groceries and cook myself, the cost would easily double to $800. With the official minimum wage at $2, surviving here is nearly impossible. I’ve always believed that if I moved to another country, my quality of life would improve—access to water (which is scarce here), decent public healthcare (which is poor here, while private care is unaffordable). Treating my diabetes and diabetic foot wounds requires daily bandages, creams, pills, and vegetables (which are expensive). Just the bandages cost me $7 a day—$210 a month. Adding the $430 from before, that’s $640 monthly, an impossible sum when I barely earn $60-80 a month. I can’t even afford home repairs (broken toilet, shower, sink) because food comes first. Fixing my bed frame costs $25—that’s almost half my monthly income. I know life would be better in Colombia or elsewhere, but I can’t leave: no savings, no health to endure the trip, no way to start over. I’m stuck here unless people help me—fix my shower, toilet, or donate so I can afford repairs and medicine. If I earned more hive rewards online, life would be easier. This is the harsh reality of living in Venezuela. Thumbnail image maded using Bing AI and edited with Canva.com
"Poverty is the worst form of violence."
<< Mahatma Gandhi >>
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This is my black cat "manclar", this account is to honor his dead (it happened years ago).
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Post translated from spanish to english using Deepseek AI
I can only tell you that the situation in Venezuela is desolate. In addition to your testimony I know others, and I can think of no other adjective.
It is a permanent challenge, and the problem is that for young people it is easier to face it, since their healthy and energetic bodies can overcome battles, but for whom we are already old and sick, the challenge acquires other dimensions, practically insurmountable and sustainable over time.
Survive, but not alive. I have always said that I already said that i died many years ago, for there in the 89th.
I believe in resurrection, some take longer than others... but since 89 is a long time. So it's time to resurrect...
Well, I think it is up in a couple of months, when it comes out of the $ 333 dollars ... there if everything follows, I return in a better way, it may be that if it happens, you know that until I live it, I do not affirm it 😀
Its rea11y sad seeing a11 these things.
The cost of 1iving there is actua11y on the high side.
Yes, it is very high, to the point that today, at this time I have only been able to lunch a little minutes ago a little rice with water, since I have only the right to pay the monthly payment of the Internet that they charge it tomorrow. I would like to eat 2 pieces of chicken, but I can't, because if I make it decomplete money to pay the internet. It is very hard to live like this brother.
I cannot imagine ever going through something like that. Having costs go up and wages stay the same is a travesty. In a healthy economy, even if there is inflation, the wages would go up proportionally, but employers like paying "less" for their overhead by not offering wage increases, making anyone who doesn't make MORE value every year, actually make LESS value and a drop in the standard of living.
!BBH
This is why you comment that living in this country is as challenging, even more if you are an older adult like me, sick and with motor difficulties, life becomes much harder, because at 56 years, what I want is to rest and not continue to suffer. But I have to go hungry daily, and with many shortcomings.
No quiero ni imaginar como seríaestar en tus zapatos, la situación aquí hiedre, y tú situación de paso es complicada, si tú solo vives de Hive y no se cómo le haces y yo que solo obtengo ingresos de Costv tampoco sé cómo le hago.. la rima solo me lleva a decir que los venezolanos somos magos😐 estar aquí es una locura, de pana que sí
Stay strong and stand together with a community of various people age concerned about the current problem.
Thanks, I don't like to walk in those communities, because what they bring are more anguish and problems, than solutions
!PIZZA
🙏
$PIZZA slices delivered:
@oadissin(1/15) tipped @manclar
Moon is coming
@manclar, I paid out 0.185 HIVE and 0.038 HBD to reward 4 comments in this discussion thread.